Recognizing Your Own Handwriting As A Password
Gary writes "A new online authentication system called Dynahand could make logging in to websites a little easier. With Dynahand, users simply identify their own handwriting, instead of entering a cryptic password or buying a biometric device to scan their fingerprints. The user's handwriting samples contain only digits, since numerals are harder for an outside party to recognize than letters are. The digits displayed are random, so the handwriting is the only clue to the correct answer."
This would make brute-forcing a password a little easier..
An attacker could simply select a hand writing at random till they get the right one.
TFA doesn't say anything about that.
Passwords actually strike me as quite a good security method. A good password is difficult to guess by a person or by a machine and is very simple to implement, leaving less margin for error in the technology.
I know, I know, people forget their passwords or choose the word "password" all the time. It still seems a little depressing that we have to use all this extra trickery to compensate for people being morons.
Peter
What, now I have to bring a typewriter everytime I go to the restaurant - to fill in the tip and total?
Here's how you crack it:
1. generate a bunch of new sessions to the login page.
2. Identify samples that appear more often than others.
3. Recognize the handwriting style.
4. Log in.
From the article's first paragraph:
...
You can't afford to be careless regarding the password coz you never know
And with that, I stopped reading. Why? Because I don't have enough time to read things that aren't written in at least passable English. If someone has a good idea, and are serious about it, they'll make the effort to communicate it well or have it communicated well for them.
Nothing to see in this article, and, by strong implication, a worthless idea.
Put my fist through my alarm clock with its ding-dong death inside my ear. - The Blackjacks.