Amazon have broken logging in to their wibble page

Who would have thought, 25 years ago, that in the future the main use of SMSs would be one-time codes issued by corporations?

The SMS codes usually consist of random strings, which the recipient is to transfer and input in the form.  But Amazon's one, which is required for login to their web site, is now a URL.  It says "tap to respond".  This assumes the customer's phone is a smartphone, and that the smartphone is connected to the internet.  As well as the assumption that the customer happens to have that particular phone on them at the time.  Amazon are saying they're not interested in custom, unless this house of cards of assumptions all happens to hold true currently.  No real alternative is provided, other than contacting customer service to remove the linked number.

The last four times I've gone travelling, I've wanted to order amazon stuff for when I got back, and failed every time, because of this.  The bar isn't that high for someone wanting to take over: just a bit of logistics, and this.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

the persistent idiocy of "privileged ports" on Unix

google is giving more and more 500 errors

7 minute workout: a straightforward audio recording (and two broken google web sites)