ANTenna Blog -- Security
The Search For A Perfect Corporate Password Policy
Posted by Matthew McKenzie Tuesday, Sep 22, 2009, 08:25 PM ET
What qualifies as a safe and sane password policy for your business? A recent blog post serves up some interesting answers to this question.
This week, blogger Paul Rubens raises a very relevant security issue: Does size matter when it comes to choosing a password or enforcing a corporate password policy. The answer, of course, is yes -- but as Rubens points out, an obsession with "tough" passwords may simply provide a band-aid that conceals other, potentially more serious, security issues:
A healthy dose of realism is clearly in order. "A lot of guidance about password length and complexity is just a sticking plaster over an underlying problem with passwords," says Dr Ant Allan, a research vice president at Gartner. "It's important to remember that if you increase length or complexity you are only defending against some kinds of attacks anyway," he says. "If the end user's machine is infected with spyware then the password will still be discovered, regardless. And a long password does nothing to prevent a hacker getting a password using social engineering. These types of policies are beloved of auditors, trotting out established ideas."
Rubens also notes that other common password security measures are far less effective than they seem to be. Policies that require users to change their passwords every few months are a great example: While this does not give an attacker nearly enough time to crack a strong password using brute-force methods, it provides way too much time for an attacker that gets a password using other means (such as spyware or a social-engineering hack) to run amok on a company's systems.
And what about those invulnerable monster passwords? The certainly are hard to crack: According to Rubens, a 15-character password could take up to two trillion years to crack, using existing mainstream computing technology. On the other hand, long passwords encourage users who lack a photographic memory to cut corners; I recall one example involving a former co-worker who kept his laptop password written down on a piece of paper -- and who like to keep this reminder not-so-safely tucked away in his laptop carrying case!
If that sounds like a familiar problem, be sure to check out Rubens' next blog entry, where he discusses an important way to balance password security and usability: password management tools.
Security
Company Size: 1-49
| Hardware & Software
This is a public forum. CMP Media and its affiliates are not responsible for and do not control what is posted herein. CMP Media makes no warranties or guarantees concerning any advice dispensed by its staff members or readers.
Community standards in this comment area do not permit hate language, excessive profanity, or other patently offensive language. Please be aware that all information posted to this comment area becomes the property of CMP Media LLC and may be edited and republished in print or electronic format as outlined in CMP Media's Terms of Service.
Important Note: This comment area is NOT intended for commercial messages or solicitations of business.
- Phone Systems Guide - What kind of phone system is right for your business
- Web Design Guide - What to look for in a Web designer
- Merchant Services Guide - Credit card processing and more
- Online Marketing Guide - Leverage the Net to market your business
- Alternative Financing Guide - How to find the cash your business needs
- View all guides
Explore ANTenna Blog
Most Recent Posts
- Verizon Introduces 'Security-As-A-Service' Packages
- Why Google Buzz Could Be A Bust For SMBs
- Nasuni Offers Cloud-Based Primary Storage
- Automobiles: The Next Network Security Challenge?
- Cachengo Rolls Out Appliance + Cloud Storage Option
ANTenna Blog Topics
- Apple
- Backup
- bMighty
- Business & E-Business
- Business Continuity
- Cloud Computing
- Company Size: 1,100-1,500
- Company Size: 250-999
- Company Size: 50-249
- Company Size: 1-49
- Disaster Recovery
- Economics
- Education
- Entrepreneurs
- Finance/Accounting
- Finance/Banking/Insurance
- Government
- Green Business
- Hardware & Software
- Healthcare
- Hospitality
- How-To
- HR
- Imaging How-To
- International
- Internet/Web
- iPhone
- IT
- Linux
- Management
- Manufacturing/Mining
- Messaging
- Mobile
- Networking & Communications
- Non-Profit
- Open Source
- Operations
- Piracy
- Printers/Printing
- Professional/Creative Services
- Retail
- Unified Communications
- Sales/Marketing
- Start-Ups
- Security
- Server How-To
- Services
- Social Networking
- Software-as-a-Service
- Storage
- Strategy/Analysis/Biz Dev
- Technology/Telecom
- The rANT
- Transportation
- Travel
- Windows
- Web 2.0
- Women in Business
ANTenna Bloggers
ANTenna Blog Roll
- ANTenna Archive
- Ars Technica
- Business Know-How
- ChannelWeb Hot Topics
- ChannelWeb The Chart
- Datamation
- Duct Tape Marketing
- The Entrepreneurial Mind
- Freakonomics
- GigaOmNet
- Guy Kawasaki
- Inc.com
- IT Organization Management
- IT Manager's Journal
- IT Toolbox
- LifeHacker
- Mashable
- MonkeyBrains
- Network Computing Blog
- Scott Berkun
- Search Engine Land
- Search Engine Watch
- SmallBizResource
- SmallBizTechnology.com
- SmallBusinessHub
- Small Business Trends
- TechCrunch
- Technologizer
- Tech Republic
- The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs
- USA Today Small Biz Connection
- Valleywag
- Walt Mossberg Feed - All Things Digital
- Web Worker Daily
- WorkHappy.net
- WSJ's Business Technology
InformationWeek SMB email newsletter!
Browse by Category
IW SMB Tech
Term Of Day:
Boost your tech
vocabulary!
InformationWeek SMB's
TechEncyclopedia
defines more than
20,000 IT terms.
FREE Technology Services Locator!
Search our database of 200,000 solution- provider locations by business activity, technology, vertical market, and customer size. Find a technology partner NOW.
go




