Smarter password management
How to handle your passwords without getting lost
Download the whole article as PDF
Short URL: http://fsmsh.com/1105
- 2005-02-10
- Server side | Easy
-
Write a full post in response to this!
Your dog’s name… your anniversary… your childrens’ initials, birthday, or birth weight… your favorite hobby, or the name of your boat. Which one do you use for your password? Network Administrators and hackers know that most people choose passwords like these to protect anything from logging into web-based bulletin boards to buying things online.
Why does it matter? Identity theft… corporate espionage… loss of your data, or digital images. Do you want to risk these things? In many cases, a weak password is all that separates your data from anyone who wants to impersonate you online, or worse.
The problem with weak passwords
Passwords that are simply names of pets, names of children, common names of any type, are called “weak passwords.” Basically any word you can find in a dictionary or list of names makes for a weak password.
I don’t like to use fear to motivate people, but practicing safe password management is as important as locking your house when you leave. Only whenever you’re connected to the internet, it’s like having a house in the worst neighborhood in the biggest city around and if you don’t put a good lock on the door, you will get broken into, even if you’re home.
Practicing safe password management is as important as locking your house when you leave
The problem with strong passwords
If you work at a large company, they may not allow you to have a simple password based on any word you can find in a dictionary. E-Commerce sites that have good security require passwords at least 8 characters long. They group the characters you type into four groups: capital letters, lowercase letters, numbers, and symbols, and then require you to have at least three out of the four groups represented in your password. And then they make you change your password every two or three months. This type of password is called a strong password.
The problem is that you soon end up with many more passwords than you can possibly keep track of. You either forget your new password, requiring the administrator to reset it for you, or you start writing them down. Far too many people have their current passwords scribbled on a yellow sticky note attached to their monitor where anyone can see it.
With weak passwords, all an attacker needs to do to obtain them is go through your trash, or engage you in innocent conversation. With strong passwords, all he needs to do is visit your office. In either case, the attacker is engaging in a type of attack called Social Engineering, which is the easiest way to break into a system.
A strong password, if you write it down somewhere insecure, is not much safer than a weak password
Do I always need a strong password?
No. Strong passwords provide far more protection against different types of attacks, especially those considered Brute Force attacks. An example is something called a Dictionary Attack, where the attacker takes a list of words, sometimes an entire dictionary, and uses a special cracking program to try each word on your account. The dictionary used includes common animal and people names.
Many systems defeat these types of attacks by locking you out after a few failed attempts. But the real concern is what an attacker can do once they break into any particular system.
A weak password is all that separates your data from anyone who wants to impersonate you online, or worse
Assess your risks
There are low risk, and high risk computer systems. To avoid having 30 different passwords to remember, you can group together systems that have the same level of risk, and reuse your passwords. Many security experts would argue that this approach reduces security, but let’s be realistic here: if you don’t remember the password for a particular system, and then type in all of your “standard” passwords to try to log into it, you may have just compromised all of the systems that use any of those passwords.
Write a full post in response to this!
Similar articles
Do you like this post?
Vote for it!
Copyright information
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
Biography
John Locke: John Locke is the author of the book Open Source Solutions for Small Business Problems. He provides technology strategy and free software implementations for small and growing businesses in the Pacific Northwest through his business, Freelock Computing.
- Login or register to post comments
- 18136 reads
- Printer friendly version (unavailable!)




Best voted contents
-
Linux performance: is Linux becoming just too slow and bloated?
Mitch Meyran, 2010-01-26 -
The Bizarre Cathedral - 66
Ryan Cartwright, 2010-02-01 -
Save "Sita Sings the Blues" from the Flash format: can you convert FLA?
Terry Hancock, 2010-01-29 -
The Morevna Project: Anime with Synfig and Blender
Terry Hancock, 2010-02-08
Buzz authors
Free Software news
- Free software every day. http://is.gd/5GMLi #warez #download #software #ingyensoftware #freesoftware
- Friss, új programok az oldalon. http://is.gd/5GMLi #warez #download #software #ingyensoftware #freesoftware
- You should be limited only by your hardware, not by crap software or financial burden. via @psyphen #truedat #freesoftware #goodgnus
- Discovered http://nakedcomputers.org/ - listing retailers of PCs without an OS. Enabling you to put your own on. #freesoftware #linux
- Just added myself to the http://wefollow.com twitter directory under: #chengdu_china #freesoftware #opensource #b... http://bit.ly/aQUevU
Similar entries
Other sites
- The Top 10 Everything (Dave). The good, the bad and the ugly.
- Free Software news (Dave & Bridget). All about free software -- free as in freedom!
- Book Reviews: Illiterarty (Bridget). Book reviews, blogs, and short stories.
Hot topics - last 60 days
-
Open Science and climategate: The IPCC/CRU needs to take a leaf out of CERN's Book
Gary Richmond, 2009-12-16 -
Linux performance: is Linux becoming just too slow and bloated?
Mitch Meyran, 2010-01-26 -
Web code is already open - why not make it free as well
Ryan Cartwright, 2010-01-20 -
Save "Sita Sings the Blues" from the Flash format: can you convert FLA?
Terry Hancock, 2010-01-29 -
Mastering a DVD using QDVDAuthor
Terry Hancock, 2010-01-08
Hot topics - last 21 days
-
Linux performance: is Linux becoming just too slow and bloated?
Mitch Meyran, 2010-01-26 -
Web code is already open - why not make it free as well
Ryan Cartwright, 2010-01-20 -
Save "Sita Sings the Blues" from the Flash format: can you convert FLA?
Terry Hancock, 2010-01-29 -
The Open-PC: one step closer to open-hardware
Ryan Cartwright, 2010-01-20
Odiogo
Free Software Magazine uses Apollo, project management and CRM for its everyday activities!

Password Management Option
Submitted by Dan Parker (not verified) on Thu, 2007-04-26 19:57.
Vote!A good option for password management on the corporation level is a product called Secret Server. Its as secure as you can get and admins can keep track of all password usage.
Secret Server is not free software
Submitted by admin on Thu, 2007-04-26 23:10.
Vote!Secret Server appears to be released under a freeware license not a free software license. This means that the source code is not available for study or modification.
FSM does not endorse the use of non-free software.
Further, it is only available on Windows platforms.