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Schneier On Un-Authentication

Trailrunner7 writes "Bruce Schenier writes on Threatpost.com: 'In computer security, a lot of effort is spent on the authentication problem. Whether it is passwords, secure tokens, secret questions, image mnemonics, or something else, engineers are continually coming up with more complicated — and hopefully more secure — ways for you to prove you are who you say you are over the Internet. This is important stuff, as anyone with an online bank account or remote corporate network knows. But a lot less thought and work have gone into the other end of the problem: how do you tell the system on the other end of the line that you are no longer there? How do you un-authenticate yourself? My home computer requires me to log out or turn my computer off when I want to un-authenticate. This works for me because I know enough to do it, but lots of people just leave their computer on and running when they walk away. As a result, many office computers are left logged in when people go to lunch, or when they go home for the night. This, obviously, is a security vulnerability.'"

4 of 336 comments (clear)

  1. Effective way to keep screens locked by stefanb · · Score: 4, Funny

    A bank I did some consulting work for had a very effective cultural rule to force people to lock their machines when they left their desks: if you find an unlocked machine, pull up the email client and send a message to everyone: "today's my birthday, drinks on me after work!" (other NSFW messages left to the readers imagination.)

    Apparently, very few people left their machines unlocked more than once...

    1. Re:Effective way to keep screens locked by aardwolf64 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Of course, the fun rose exponentially when two people had their machines unlocked. I would frequently carry on a whole phantom conversation.

      "Hey, let's go to lunch tomorrow"
      "I can't, I have to wax my hamster"
      "I didn't know you had a hamster"
      "..."

  2. MS solved this problem, but removed it with W2K+ by Tumbleweed · · Score: 4, Funny

    Windows 95/98/ME had a built-in solution to this problem, but MS removed it in the Win 2K and newer. They simply had the machine crash every 2 hours. Heavy handed, sure, but it worked.

  3. Re:I lock my computer when I walk away by Ephemeriis · · Score: 4, Funny

    Then make the lock at 11 minutes or u can give your mouse a click while u re talking.Doesnt sound that hard.U just have to adopt.

    But... I don't want any more children.

    --
    "Work is the curse of the drinking classes." -Oscar Wilde