Educause Security Discussion mailing list archives
Re: Please do not change your password
From: "SCHALIP, MICHAEL" <mschalip () CNM EDU>
Date: Wed, 14 Apr 2010 08:34:25 -0600
....and - if the bad guys were already in the system - they already owned the box. In which case - 8-char vs 30-char would make little difference as well.... -----Original Message----- From: The EDUCAUSE Security Constituent Group Listserv [mailto:SECURITY () LISTSERV EDUCAUSE EDU] On Behalf Of Mike Porter Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2010 8:30 AM To: SECURITY () LISTSERV EDUCAUSE EDU Subject: Re: [SECURITY] Please do not change your password On Wed, 14 Apr 2010, Doty, Timothy T. wrote:
You say that passwords are no longer cracked? Then read up on the compromise the Apache folks had where the database of (unsalted) hashed passwords was obtained by the hackers. That is only a single case, but it is very recent and IMO very relevant. Those 8-char passwords are little better than plain text in such a situation.
An unsalted password is not a good choice and does not prove anything with regard to the current discussion. And in any case, it is well understood that access to the hashed passwords can easily lead to a compromise. While longer passwords are harder to crack, once you have the hashes, it really becomes a matter of how much money you can afford to throw at the problem - or how many bots you have that you can set to chewing on the problem. So, yes, getting access to the hashed passwords is a gold mine, but most compromises are phishes, other forms of social engineering, or keyloggers installed via socially engineering viruses (ohhh! I have a package, must install this .exe to find out about it), or hacked websites. A few weeks ago, the website for a local paper was hacked. It is the sort of paper that most local politicians or their assistants would read. If they had unpatched systems, many of the local politicians could have had their passwords stolen and access to their email be had by those who wanted it. This could have made for a nice package of information for someone willing to pay for it and make use of it locally. However, most likely the accounts were just harvested for spam and credit card info. But, in any case, password length and lifetime does not figure into equation very well.
If the bad guys "just worked around" passwords why would they care to obtain a hash list? The argument is short sighted and misses the value of defense in depth.
Mike Mike Porter Systems Programer V IT/NSS University of Delaware
Tim Doty-----Original Message----- From: The EDUCAUSE Security Constituent Group Listserv [mailto:SECURITY () LISTSERV EDUCAUSE EDU] On Behalf Of SCHALIP, MICHAEL Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2010 8:43 AM To: SECURITY () LISTSERV EDUCAUSE EDU Subject: Re: [SECURITY] Please do not change your password Have there been any studies recently that have identified the net effects of "long passwords" or passphrases?....or complex passwords? Before coming to higher ed, I came from the "sensitive" Fed sector - and they used 8-char passwords that were generated for you - upper/lower case, and one number, (and they used a cool little routine in the password generator that made the passwords "pseudo- pronounceable" so that they were easier to remember.) I also remember asking why they weren't required to use passwords that were longer, more complex, etc - and the answer was: "Passwords keep honest people honest - the vast majority (if not all) of compromised accounts have not come about by the way of 'cracked passwords' - they have come about by the capturing or surrendering of legitimate passwords. Captured through malware or bogus websites - Surrendered through phishing or social engineering means." I was skeptical until I started doing some research on my own - and I couldn't find more than 1-2 obscure instances where a password was actually 'cracked' - most were cases where passwords were immaterial, and the system was compromised by "going around the password" altogether. So - this does beg the question - even though longer passwords are theoretically harder to "crack", who cares....the bad guys are just going to go around them anyway....? Thoughts? And thanks for the discussion.... Michael -----Original Message----- From: The EDUCAUSE Security Constituent Group Listserv [mailto:SECURITY () LISTSERV EDUCAUSE EDU] On Behalf Of John Ladwig Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2010 7:27 AM To: SECURITY () LISTSERV EDUCAUSE EDU Subject: Re: [SECURITY] Please do not change your password Unlikely that it'll change the audit book. Nor should it, necessarily. The study is really predicated on consumer accounts, and doesn't address duty of care issues for data custodians, among other things. I've rarely seen that mentioned over the last five months' discussion, since the paper was published. One particularly acute point on this topic is the paper's assertion that financial fraud loses the use nothing. While true for some financial accounts situations for personal accounts, that is demonstrably not true for US commercial online bank accounts (see Krebsonsecurity.com for many examples), and as I recall isn't true for all personal banking accounts in other countries. All that said, it's a goodish paper, and we've all known that passwords are horrid for well over a decade, but substantial progress on password replacement is pretty poor, overall. -jml -----Original Message----- From: Justin Sherenco Sent: 2010-04-14 08:04:59 To: Justin Sherenco;The EDUCAUSE Security Constituent Group Listserv Cc: Subject: [SECURITY] Please do not change your password Hello, I came across an interesting article on password changes. Author Cormac Herley of Microsoft makes a good case albeit just a cost-benefit analysis. I had to go back and think of why these types of policies were created in the first place. I came to my own conclusion that they were created before the days of complex password (passphrase) enforcement and the ability to automatically lock out accounts after X amount of failed log-in attempts. Do you think he can convince the auditors? <http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2010/04/11/please_do_ not _change_your_password/?page=full> http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/ideas/articles/2010/04/11/please_do_n ot_ change_your_password/?page=full Regards, Justin ------------------------------------- Justin Sherenco Security Analyst 734-487-8574 Easten Michigan University http://it.emich.edu/security -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean. -- This message has been scanned for viruses and dangerous content by MailScanner, and is believed to be clean.
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Current thread:
- Re: Please do not change your password, (continued)
- Re: Please do not change your password Paul Kendall (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Sarazen, Daniel (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Jones, Dan (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password SCHALIP, MICHAEL (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Doty, Timothy T. (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password David LaPorte (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password SCHALIP, MICHAEL (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Doty, Timothy T. (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Mike Porter (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Mike Porter (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password SCHALIP, MICHAEL (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Justin Sherenco (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Valdis Kletnieks (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Basgen, Brian (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Allison Dolan (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Doty, Timothy T. (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Paul Kendall (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password David LaPorte (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Jeff Kell (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Jacob Steelsmith (Apr 14)
- Re: Please do not change your password Steve Werby (Apr 15)
(Thread continues...)