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Share with your team · Communication

Share Discord 2FA with your team — without screenshots.

Most teams sharing Discord access do it badly: a screenshot in Slack, a personal phone in someone's drawer, a 1Password note that drifts out of date. Here's the right way.

The setup

Three minutes from sign-up to first Discord code.

  1. 01Sign up for Kaito. Free 14-day trial, no credit card. You'll set up MFA on your own account before adding any tokens.
  2. 02Add the Discord 2FA seed. In Kaito, go to Tokens → New and either scan the Discord 2FA QR code or paste the secret. Kaito auto-resolves the Discord icon.
  3. 03Choose who can see the code. Create a group (e.g. discord-admins), add the relevant teammates, and grant the group code-only permission on the token.
  4. 04Generate the first code. Anyone in the group opens the token in Kaito and sees the current 6-digit code with a 30-second countdown ring. The view is logged immediately to the audit log.
Why this is better

The Discord screenshot in Slack vs. Kaito.

Screenshot in Slack
  • • Searchable by everyone in the workspace
  • • Replicated to every device anyone has logged Slack in on
  • • Stays in DM history when teammates leave
  • • No record of who used it when
  • • Encodes the seed itself, valid forever
Discord via Kaito
  • • Seed encrypted at rest, never sent to clients
  • • Group-permissioned: only authorized teammates see the code
  • • Auto-revoked when someone leaves the group
  • • Every code view logged with user, IP, time
  • • One-click rotation when needed
Compliance

Sharing forbidden for Discord

Discord's terms of service explicitly forbid account sharing. If you do need shared access for legitimate operational reasons, Kaito's per-user permissions and tamper-evident audit log give you a defensible record.

Stop pasting Discord codes in Slack.

Set up shared 2FA in Kaito in three minutes. Free 14-day trial, no card.