Update windows/security/identity-protection/hello-for-business/hello-planning-guide.md

Co-Authored-By: JohanFreelancer9 <48568725+JohanFreelancer9@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit is contained in:
ImranHabib 2019-09-25 21:51:33 +05:00 committed by GitHub
parent 690c3b3b5b
commit ad8311c913
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG Key ID: 4AEE18F83AFDEB23

View File

@ -94,7 +94,7 @@ The built-in Windows Hello for Business provisioning experience creates a hardwa
#### Multifactor authentication #### Multifactor authentication
> [!IMPORTANT] > [!IMPORTANT]
> As of July 1, 2019, Microsoft will no longer offer MFA Server for new deployments. New customers who would like to require multi-factor authentication from their users should use cloud-based Azure Multi-Factor Authentication. Existing customers who have activated MFA Server prior to July 1 will be able to download the latest version, future updates and generate activation credentials as usual. See [Getting started with the Azure Multi-Factor Authentication Server](https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/active-directory/authentication/howto-mfaserver-deploy) for more details. > As of July 1, 2019, Microsoft will no longer offer MFA Server for new deployments. New customers who require multi-factor authentication for their users should use cloud-based Azure Multi-Factor Authentication. Existing customers who have activated MFA Server prior to July 1, 2019 will be able to download the latest version, future updates and generate activation credentials as usual. See [Getting started with the Azure Multi-Factor Authentication Server](https://docs.microsoft.com/azure/active-directory/authentication/howto-mfaserver-deploy) for more details.
The goal of Windows Hello for Business is to move organizations away from passwords by providing them a strong credential that provides easy two-factor authentication. The built-in provisioning experience accepts the users weak credentials (username and password) as the first factor authentication; however, the user must provide a second factor of authentication before Windows provisions a strong credential. The goal of Windows Hello for Business is to move organizations away from passwords by providing them a strong credential that provides easy two-factor authentication. The built-in provisioning experience accepts the users weak credentials (username and password) as the first factor authentication; however, the user must provide a second factor of authentication before Windows provisions a strong credential.