In 2013, the July cumulative update for Lync Server 2013 added two-factor authentication for the Lync 2013 client. As we mentioned in the introduction, the feature is available for Lync Online users, while on-premises deployment requires you to add a third-party solution. Two-factor authentication is based on the "something you know, something you have" principle, meaning that knowing a user's password without having an additional security item (a smart card) will not give access to Lync. An additional method could be based on "something you have" (a trusted device). We will see how to configure Office 365 (Lync Online) support for Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA). Office 365 MFA is a scaled-down version of Azure Multi-Factor Authentication service available to support both Azure and on-premises deployments. We will talk about it in the There's more… section.
Lync Server Cookbook
Lync Server Cookbook
Overview of this book
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Lync Server Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Free Chapter
Lync 2013 Security
Lync 2013 Authentication
Lync Dial Plans and Voice Routing
Lync 2013 Integration with Exchange
Scripts and Tools for Lync
Designing a Lync Solution – The Overlooked Aspects
Lync 2013 in a Resource Forest
Managing Lync 2013 Hybrid and Lync Online
Lync 2013 Monitoring and Reporting
Managing Lync 2013 Backup and Restore
Controlling Your Network – A Quick Drill into QoS and CAC
Lync 2013 Debugging
Index
Customer Reviews