28 April, 2011

Passwords, part one of two

In light of the current PSN disaster, and with clear memory of the recent Gawker problems, I want to write about something important, which bothers me a lot.

Do not use the same password in multiple places.

People do not understand why this is such a gigantic problem. They think it is just a matter of convenience (few passwords to remember) versus security, quite alike to how you don't use a different key for every lock in your life. The key that opens your car also starts it, and the key to your apartment complex also opens the door to your flat. But that is very far from the truth. The proper analogy would be to use a single key for all your locks, but at the same time, give a copy of your key to safeguard to every single person that ever enters your home, including the plumber and the boyfriend of your daughter of whom you do not approve.

In more technical terms: If you use the same password for Twitter, Facebook, Gmail, eBay, Gawker, PSN and Flickr, then your chance of losing all accounts in one fell swoop has risen significantly. It does not matter if Gmail and eBay have tight security. If Twitter screws up, your bank account is gone. If Flickr screws up, your bank account is gone. If PSN or Gawker gets hacked, kiss your eBay account goodbye.

It does not actually end here, it gets worse. We all have our major sites which we use daily. But most of us also have accounts at places where we really do not need them often. I play Bloodline Champions (recommended!) which is a tiny game with only a few thousand players, made by a small developer. But I have a forum account for that, which is all but inactive. Still, there is a password involved. And if they get compromised, or a disgruntled employee leaves them, my password could get lost. If it were identical to my others, I would be in trouble.

And it gets worse still. There are quite a few sites out there who want you to register with them, for no reason whatsoever. Some warez downloads lead to files that are password protected, with a text file nearby, telling you to register at their shady site. If you do, not only are you prone to get spam on your e-mail, but even worse, they get a username/password combination from you. They can just try that on google and see if it works. This is the extreme, but do you trust Google? Do you trust Twitter? Do you trust the guy that hosts that discussion forum on politics / porn / kittens you frequent often? Or would he just sell your password? Identity theft is a serious business.

Next up: How to do better.

Addendum
There is such a thing as "salted hashes", which is a technique to store passwords on a server without allowing people to read it, so as to prevent an employee to sell them. In that case, it is a lot harder to get your real password. But it requires that the people running the service know what they are doing. Most do, but if only one does not and gets compromised, the shit has hit the fan.

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