
After completing the burning process, turn the token display off and turn it on again. If NFC link is established and the code is correctly scanned, you should see a status window showing "Burning." and eventually (in a second or two), "burn seed successful." message in the log window Upon successful connection, click the "Burn seed" button. Turn on the hardware token and touch it with your phone (if Android device is used make sure it is overlapped by the NFC antenna, with iPhone 7 and newer, just bring it close to the top of the phone) and click "Connect" on the app. See below an example for our Android app: Look for a QR code icon on the burner app. Keep the QR code shown on the screen and continue with NFC burner as described below. On the next step, Zoom will show a QR code. Zoom will ask for your password before proceeding. Select Authentication App as your authentication method by clicking on 'Set up' link next to it. Sign in to the Zoom web portal after your admin has enabled 2FA or click on 'Turn on' in the Two-factor Authentication section of your profile page (for personal accounts). If 2FA option is not available, ask your admin to enable it. If your Zoom admin has enabled two-factor authentication (2FA) for you, you need to set up 2FA when you sign in to the Zoom portal. Windows app is also available but requires an NFC writer device. An iPhone 7 or newer or Android device with NFC - this is needed for the enrollment only, subsequent logins will only require the hardware token. A Token2 programmable token (the guide below shows C301-i as an example).
login using Google or Facebook account), 2FA feature may not be available
Important: if you are using social login feature (i.e. In this article, we will show how our programmable tokens can be used to protect your Zoom account. This provides an additional layer of security since users will need access to their phone to sign in to the Zoom web portal, desktop client, mobile app, or Zoom Room. Two-factor authentication (2FA) is a two-step sign-in process that requires a one-time code from a mobile app or text message, in addition to the main Zoom sign-in. Using Token2 hardware tokens for Zoom two-factor authentication