MySpace Users Have Stronger Passwords Than Employees
Ant writes "A Wired News column reports on Bruce Schneier's analysis of data from a successful phishing attack on MySpace, and compares the captured user-passwords to an earlier data-set from a corporation. He concludes that MySpace users are better at coming up with good passwords than corporate drones." From the article: "We used to quip that 'password' is the most common password. Now it's 'password1.' Who said users haven't learned anything about security? But seriously, passwords are getting better. I'm impressed that less than 4 percent were dictionary words and that the great majority were at least alphanumeric. Writing in 1989, Daniel Klein was able to crack (.gz) 24 percent of his sample passwords with a small dictionary of just 63,000 words, and found that the average password was 6.4 characters long."
This may not mean that "passwords are getting better." It may just prove once again that people care more about their personal things than other people's stuff.
Or maybe strong-passworded MySpace users feel they're more technically superior thus easily fallen to good phising technique, while their weak-passworded counterparts feel more needs to be careful.
Or maybe nothing really happened, it's just a fake analysis.
Virtual Betting on Facebook for non-geeks.
Draw your own conclusions, but I think there might be something to this.
(and yes I did RTFA+LFA, do I lose my subscription?)
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I'm impressed that less than 4 percent were dictionary words and that the great majority were at least alphanumeric.
I'm not. MySpace users have good passwords because MySpace requires them to, not because they're savvy. "Your password must contain at least one number and one punctuation mark," etc.
(is patheticism a word? nevermind...)
When I started at my current place of employment, I was asked to set up a password to get into our company VPN. The rules seemed pretty straightforward, and since I try to be conscientious about good passwords, I didn't think twice about the clause in the policy that said "Your password must be 8 characters in length."
It turns out, they meant it. As in, exactly eight characters. Not nine, not seven. Ten is right out.
For added amusement: one of my company's lines of business is IT security consulting. Ha.
I had a modpoint left, but it expired. Seriously, l33t sp33k makes for excellent passwords... weird spelling, dropping vowels, and replacing letters with numbers, along with the either stuff j00 d0 wh3n j00 r ub3r1337 makes for passwords that can withstand a dictionary attack, are stronger against brute force because you have digits in random places (and not just at the end), and more...
Computer security is something that kids are learning at younger ages these days. Case in point: My 6-year-old daughter plays a flash game called clubpenguin.com, which is basically a MUD where you're a penguin and you go around playing video games, socializing with other penguins, taking care of your pet, etc. Yesterday at school, her friend asked her for her login info, and she gave it to her. Yesterday evening, my daughter finished her homework, tried to log on, and got a message saying she'd been banned for 24 hours for cussing, and the time when her penguin was cussing was a time when she hadn't been on the computer. No big deal, but at age 6, she's now had a concrete experience that shows her how it's not a good idea to give your password to someone else, even someone you think you can trust.
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The MySpace user's password protects their own information.
The corporate user's password protects some corporation's information.
And, most passwords protect nothing worth protecting, such as my access to the NY Times.
Actually, this says that the subset of Myspace users that are dumb enough to fall for a phishing attack, are still picking better passwords than a representative subset of the whole set of corporate employees. So the worst of the Myspace users are still better than the average corporate employee.
It doesn't really surprise me. The slashdot hive mind may not greatly respect Myspace users, but the fact that they are on the internet and trying new stuff like Myspace, makes them a lot more tech-friendly than the average American, or the average corporate employee. There is a huge amount of technophobia among the general public, and just being able to use the internet as entertainment puts you very much ahead of the flock. And it gets you learning, at which point the process becomes autonomous, and you're on the slippery slope into geekdom.
They were both compromised by social engineering. Which allows us to see the passwords people are choosing and find that corporate passwords are more venerable to brute force attacks.
They were both compromised by social engineering. Which allows us to see the passwords people are choosing and find that corporate passwords are more venerable to brute force attacks.
.bash_history files when someone mistyped 'su' and then typed the password having it stored.
I was being a little facetious. I'm not one who believes in "strong" passwords simply because I don't believe that they are secure to begin with.
A standard lock on a door may not be as "strong" as a steel door with bolts going through it like a vault, but I do believe that most weak passwords are strong enough, like standard locks. In my years of working with computers, I have heard plenty of things about passwords (strong or not) being found or given away. I've heard of them phished, sniffed on plaintext transmissions, or social engineered. I've heard of root passwords being left in
In fact, as far as weak passwords go, I've heard of default passwords being used plenty of times, even here on slashdot a few years back. I've heard of a handful of people getting in with 200 or so attempts via the standard ssh bruteforce attacks, but almost 100% of the time a computer geek's version of a weak password will never be compromised. The only exceptions were when people knew someone and tried things like their kids names or whatnot, but that is VERY rare. I would like to hear any number of examples of brute force breakins via weak passwords, but its so much easier to just get the few characters from somebody via trickery or just asking them vs brute force. Back to the locks, even if a lock only takes a simple shoulder to break, most people will simply try all of the other doors and windows first.