How to use the HP Anyware Licensing Portal
The HP Anyware Licensing Portal provides secure access to the list of licenses and can be used by the company's assigned Account Administrator. The Account Administrator role can be fulfilled by one central administrator or can be distributed across …
Do PCoIP Zero Clients support multi-factor authentication?
PCoIP Zero Clients support multi-factor authentication when connecting to HP Anyware, PCoIP Remote Workstation Cards, VMware or Amazon WorkSpaces. These can be used in pre-session authentication and in-session/post-session authentication scenarios. Since …
Can multi-factor authentication be used with PCoIP?
Multi-factor authentication systems are supported by Teradici Products. Examples of multi-factor authentication systems are RSA SecurID and Duo. HP Anyware Manager supports multi-factor authentication as secondary authentication via a radius server.  …
Unquoted service path vulnerability in PCoIP Agents for Windows 19.08.0 and earlier, and PCoIP Clients for Windows 19.08.2 and earlier
Last revised 2019-Dec-06   Summary An unquoted service path vulnerability has been discovered in PCoIP Standard Agent for Windows and PCoIP Graphics Agent for Windows, versions 19.08.0 and earlier, and also in PCoIP Client for Windows versions 19.08.2 and …
How do I tell which encryption method is being used for the PCoIP session?
PCoIP technology supports just AES-256-GCM encryption. Both methods of encryption - AES-128-GCM and Salsa20-256-round12 have been deprecated. The examples below are still valid when trying to determine which encryption method is being used. In viewing the …
What are my options for using PCoIP between trusted and untrusted networks?
PCoIP is encrypted by default and it cannot be disabled. This makes PCoIP itself secure on untrusted networks. To get PCoIP traffic from untrusted networks to PCoIP Hosts the following options can be used: Over a VPN that is UDP compatible. An SSL VPN …
Security notice (CVE-2020-0601): Windows vulnerability affecting PCoIP Agents and PCoIP Clients
Summary A vulnerability in the Microsoft Windows CryptoAPI (CVE-2020-0601) fails to properly validate certificates that use Elliptic Curve Cryptography (ECC). This may allow an attacker to spoof the validity of certificate chains used to secure a PCoIP …