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Honeytokens: The Other Honeypot

martyros writes "I just read a fascinating article by Lance Spitzner securityfocus.com about a concept he calls honeytokens. The idea is similar to that of a honeypot, which he defines as "an information system resource whose value lies in unauthorized or illicit use of that resource". Rather than having a computer that's designed to be broken into, however, you have say, a record in a database or a file has no legitimate use; ergo, if anyone uses it, it must be illegitimate. An example he gives: adding a record to the hospital database for a guy named "John F. Kennedy". It doesn't correspond to a real person, so no one has any business looking at the file. If someone does access it, you know that they're abusing their privileges somehow. The article has several other clever examples, which I found very thought-provoking."

4 of 427 comments (clear)

  1. I do this already by L.+VeGas · · Score: 5, Funny

    By placing arsenic in your water bottle that you leave in the refrigerator, you can tell who's been pilfering your lunch.

    1. Re:I do this already by dschl · · Score: 4, Funny

      I have heard stories of leaving gloves dusted with dye powder (same stuff used in money shipments) in your locker, just for the glove-thief on drilling rig crews. You always know who is stealing your gloves, but the bright red hands of the thief let everyone else know, too. If you are feeling a little bit nastier, you dust the inside of the glove with caustic, and then leave it in your locker for the glove thief. The caustic is a bit more dangerous, because if he rubs his eyes just before his fingers start burning, it could cause severe eye damage.

      The lunch thief in my drilling crew was the motorman, who did five years in Kingston pen for armed robbery. Claimed he was "reformed", so I guess he didn't really consider sandwich theft to be much of a crime. I was tempted to add ex-lax or something worse just for him, but never got around to it.

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  2. Been around for awhile by miyako · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...several years in fact, although in a different form.
    A while back a bunch of businesses created a website called slashdot to monitor people who were surfing the net instead of doing work.

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    Famous Last Words: "hmm...wikipedia says it's edible"
  3. Re:Nothing new here, move along by AndroidCat · · Score: 4, Funny

    Encyclopaedias have done this for ages too. Make up a boring tiny entry for .. Boring Arkansas, and wait for a rival to copy it, then sue them. (Appologies if there is a Boring Arkansas, I am so sorry for you.)

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