Password Security Not Easy
mekkab writes "The Wall Street Journal reports (yet again) that despite knowing better, users do dumb things to compromise security. Is seven different 8 character passwords (with numbers and mixed cases) really too much to ask? Do people need training on how to make well known phrase (to them) into a perfect password acronym, or other memory boosting techniques? Or is it that the entire business culture needs to change from within to take digital security seriously?" If you require unmemorizable passwords, you've effectively changed the security requirement from "something you know" to "something you have", and if the required dongle is a note under your keyboard...
I hate people that put their password under their keyboard. Like damn people, on the underside of the desk, is that so much to ask.
"I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
I use my dog's name as my password.
:-D
My dog is called Pchg65Lb, but he changes his name every few weeks.
(Spudley Strikes Again!)
You'll be surprised by how dramatically your capacity to remember passwords will improve once this becomes a regular feature of your workday.
For added effect, construct horribly complex and impossible to remember passwords a few times every day. Over time, basic survival instincts and the urge to avoid the inevitable kick in the balls will overcome the limitations posed by your poor memory.
An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
>a E9 b ?p c &m
;-)
>d 6K e aY f eP
>g !S h gn i D=
>j Hd k vw l Cb
>m W5 n 4$ o R3
>p x% q 7M r NF
>s +2 t s* u Ay
>v fL w zG x Zu
>y cX z Qr
So what does the output of that Perl script look like?
-- TheMadRedHatter
while(1)
{
}
Ah, the story of life.