WASHINGTON:
Looking for a safe password? You can give
HQbgbiZVu9AWcqoSZmChwgtMYTrM7HE3ObVWGepMeOsJf4iHMyNXMT1BrySA4d7 a try.
Good luck memorizing it.
Sixty-three random
alpha-numericacters in this case, generated by an online password
generator are as good as it gets when it comes to securing your virtual
life.
But as millions of internet users have
learned the hard way, no password is safe when hackers can, and do,
pilfer them en masse banks, email services, retailers or social media
websites that fail to fully protect their servers.
And
besides, with technology growing by leaps and bounds, why does the
username-and-password formula a relic of computing's Jurassic era remain
the norm?
"The incredibly short answer is,
it's cheap," said Per Thorsheim, a Norwegian online security expert and
organizer of PasswordsCon, the world's only conference dedicated to
passwords, taking place in Las Vegas in July.
"If
you want anything else if you want some kind of two-factor
authentication that involves using a software-based token, a
hardware-based token or biometric authentication you need something
extra," he told AFP.
"And that will cost you extra money."
Back in the beginning, it wasso easy.
The
very first computers were not only room-sized mainframes, but also
stand-alone devices. They didn't connect to each other, so passwords
were needed only by a handful of operators who likely knew each other
anyway.
Then along came the internet, binding a
burgeoning number of computers, smartphones and tablets into a
globe-girdling web that required some virtual means for strangers to
identify each other.
Passwords have thus
proliferated so much that it's a daily struggle for users to cope with
dozens of them and not just on one personal computer, but across several
devices.
There's even a name for the syndrome: password fatigue.
"People
never took passwords very seriously, and then we had a number of really
big password breaches," said Marian Merritt, Internet security advocate
for software provider Norton.
"As people are
increasingly accessing websites smartphones and tablets, typing
passwords is becoming an ever bigger pain," added Sarah Needham of
Confident Technologies, developers of a picture-based password
alternative.
In a 24-nation survey last year,
Norton found that 40 percent of users don't bother with complex
passwords or fail to change their passwords on a regular basis.
Rival
security app firm McAfee says its research indicates that more than 60
percent of users regularly visit five to 20 websites that require
passwords, and that a like-sized proportion preferred easy-to-use
passwords.
The most popular passwords,
infamously, are "password" and "123456," according to Mark Burnett,
whose 2005 book "Perfect Password: ion, Protection, Authentication" was
among the first on the topic.
Biometrics are coming
Carl
Windsor, director of product management at California-based network
security firm Fortinet, said he once ran John the Ripper, a free program
to crack passwords, through an employer's Unix system with its
consent.
Within seconds, Windsor had one-third
of its passwords. Within minutes, he had another third. "I also won a
bet by finding the 'super secure' password of a colleague in less than
five minutes," he told AFP by email.
Password alternatives are in the pipeline.
Google
is toying with the idea of users tapping their devices with
personalized coded finger rings or inserting unique ID cards called
Yubikeys into the USB ports of their computers.
The
FIDO Alliance, a consortium that includes PayPal, is pushing an
open-source system in which, for instance, websites would ask smartphone
users to identify themselves by placing their fingertips on their
touchscreens.
"These (biometric) technologies
are coming to a placethey are highly mature, cost effective and in a
position to roll out into the consumer market today," FIDO's vice
president Ramesh Kesanupalli told AFP.
Kesanupalli
said FIDO technology could be available as early as this year,
bettering IBM fellow David Nahamoo's prediction in 2011 that biometrics
would replace passwords within five years.
In
Washington, the US Patent and Trademark Office has recently published
several patent applications Apple that envision facial recognition and
fingerprint scanning.
Motorola's head of
research Regina Dugan has gone further, proposing a "password pill" with
a microchip and a battery that would be activated by stomach acid. The
resulting signal would emit an unique ID radio signal.
"I
take a vitamin every morning. What if I take vitamin authentication?"
said Dugan at the D11 tech conference in California last month, quoted
by TechWeekEurope.co.uk.
For now, many
Internet services are embracing two-factor authentication, that
challenges users with a bonus security question "What is your dog's
name?" or emits a one-use-only numeric code via SMS messaging.
Online
password managers with namesLastpass, KeePass, 1Password, Dashlane and
Apple's just-announced iCloud Keychain have also been popping
upmushrooms.
They pledge to securely stash an
individual's entire password collection, accessible via one master
password. Some experts, however, consider the idea a Band-Aid solution
pending the definitive password replacement.
Until
then, security experts widely agree on two core principles: make your
passwords as long as possible, mixing up words with some numbers and
symbols, and never ever use the same password for more than one
website.
Beyond that, just cross your fingers
and pray that the website you're using is doingit can at its end to
protect the mental keys to your virtual world.
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