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Part 10: The Staff Interview - System Design Mastery

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  Leading high-level architecture discussions on authentication, device binding, and resilience engineering. Previous Part:  Part 9: Zero Trust — Device Binding & Risk Signals You’ve spent nine chapters building a fortress. You’ve mastered hardware-backed Keystores and Zero Trust architectures. But in a  Staff-Level Interview , the code is just the baseline. The real challenge is the whiteboard:  “Design a secure, global authentication system for a high-stakes banking app.” In this series finale, we zoom out to the architectural level to see how a  Staff Mobile Engineer  leads a system design discussion, manages contextual friction, and defends a security posture against a room of Lead Architects. 🏛️ The “Staff” Framework: Discovery & Constraints A  Staff Engineer  defines the  Operational Constraints  and  Compliance boundaries  before drawing a single box. 1. Requirements & SLAs Never start until you’ve defined y...

Part 9: Zero Trust - Device Binding & Risk Signals

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 Prevent account takeovers by binding session tokens to hardware-backed keys and implementing DPoP-inspired proof of possession. In  Part 8 , we hardened the network pipe. But what if an attacker steals a valid session token directly from a compromised device or via a sophisticated phishing attack? In a  Zero Trust  architecture, we stop trusting the session token as a standalone proof of identity. Instead, we treat every request as potentially hostile until it passes a multi-factor “Risk Check.” Today, we implement the ultimate defense against Account Takeover (ATO):  Device Binding & Intelligent Risk Signals. 🔐 The Core Concept: Session ≠ Device The traditional approach is binary: If the request has a valid  Bearer  token, let it through. The  Senior Approach  is rigorous: A token is only valid if it is presented by the  exact  hardware to which it was originally issued. ⚡ TL;DR The Problem:  Token theft (Sidejacking), w...