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Title: | User-side password authentication: A study |
Author: | Sarga, Libor; Jašek, Roman |
Document type: | Conference paper (English) |
Source document: | Proceedings of the 11th European Conference on Information Warfare and Security 2012, ECIW 2012. 2012, p. 237-243 |
ISBN: | 978-1-908272-56-0 |
Abstract: | Researchers have for a time been struggling to change inert mindset of users regarding passwords as a response to advances in processing power, emergence of highly-scalable computing models, and attackers prioritizing human element for attacks. Recommendations regarding security are ignored as documented by recent corporate database breaches and releases of unencrypted password caches which corroborated lacking security awareness in vast majority of Internet users. In order to educate users about computer security, terms such as hashing, cipher systems and their weaknesses, brute-force attacks, social engineering, multi-factor authentication, and balance between usability and ease of use must be clearly explained. However, academia tend to focus on areas requiring deep mathematical or programmatic background, clear communication of these security elements while minimizing scientific rigor thus remains challenging. The article aims to provide a concise, comprehensive research overview and outline of authentication, including information entropy, hashing algorithms, reverse password engineering, importance of complexity and length in passwords, general-purpose attacks such as brute-force and social engineering as well as specialized ones, namely side-channel interception. Novel ways of increasing security by utilizing two- and multi-factor authentication, visual passwords, pass phrases, mnemonic-based strings will be considered as well along with their advantages over the traditional textual password model and pitfalls for their widespread propagation. In particular, we hypothesize that technological developments allow vendors to offer solutions which limit unauthorized third parties from gaining windows of opportunity to exploit weaknesses in the authentication schemes. However, as infrastructure becomes more resilient, attackers shift their focus towards human-based attacks (social engineering, social networking). Due to largely unchanging short-term behavior patterns, institutions need to lecture employees over extended periods about being vigilant to leaks of procedural and organizational information which may help attackers bypass perimeter-level security measures. We conclude the article by listing emerging threats in the field, specifically social networks-distributed malware and mobile devices targeting. |
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