
Yes, this is the one (Last) uber-super secure system you trust with ALL your passwords. Ouch. But d
espite the hacking, LastPass says users who had a strong master password in the first place are still safe (and they are forcing users to change that master password now).
I’m not a security expert and don’t pretend to be one, so all you can get from me is some ramblings from a business user:
Most of us are at an even higher risk every day: statistics show that over 60% of Internet users
have a favorite set of login credentials …
The Password Conundrum
Software April 12th, 2010
I’m not a security expert and don’t pretend to be one, but half-cooked advice on fundamental security issues p***es me off big time. Today it’s a lengthy article at the Boston Globe: Please do not change your password.
It’s based on a study by a Microsoft researcher, who concludes that regularly changing passwords is a big waste of time – so far so good and I’ve just saved you reading 3 pages –but what’s the conclusion?
- Use strong, bullet-proof passwords in the first place
- Use updated security software, don’t install unknown stuff to avoid keyloggers
It all makes sense, except that it’s hard to do. Statistics show that over 60% of Internet users have a favorite set of login credentials and they use that single set across many systems. Very-very dangerous, but the reason we do it is that this is what we can remember easily.
The missing piece from the advice is how we deal with the “bullet-proof” and unique set of login credentials we create on dozens of systems we need to log in. Some people will develop a formula to make up such passwords – too bad such patterns are often recognizable. Others will write them down … ouch!
So we’re left with two options:
- physical devices, be it lists, passcode cards, USB sticks..etc, what if you lose them?
- password management systems like Keypass, Lastpass, Passspack, Syferlock… – what if they get compromised?
What’s your solution?
Related posts:
- LastPass – So Good I’ll Dismiss Any Concern
- SyferLock Almost Solves The Password Security Problem
- Wake Up People, It’s More than Just Your Twitter Password
- Mandatory Password Changes Costs Billions in Lost Productivity [Passwords]
- Changing Your Password – Security Measure Or Pure Nonsense? You Decide (lockergnome.com)

Tags: CloudAve, keypass, lastpass, login, passpack, Password, security, syferlock
How to Navigate the Password Jungle
SaaS, Technology January 17th, 2008
In a funny (scary?) case of coincidence, the password problem became got highlighted in TechMeme just weeks after I came under an attack that caused me to rethink my password strategy. My login credentials got compromised at a Gmail account that I only use for mail-lists: – I fixed it soon, no harm done. Two month earlier my eBay account got hijacked, and while I was p***ed at eBay not doing anything about it, again, I could regain control, and changed all related accounts (PayPal ..etc, before suffering any consequences).
Then I started to think: what’s the point in stealing an account at a site like, let’s say photo sharing? The hijackers really can’t benefit… or can they? Then it hit me: I am (well, I was, until that point) just like 61% of Internet users, using the same userid/password combination on all sites. To purpose of attacking not-so-critical sites may just be to harvest login credentials, which the bad guys then can feed to their bots to try on all sorts of financial sites. Oops.. now I had a crisis. Needless to say I spent the next half day researching the subject and changing my login credentials.
Now, while I am fairly opinionated, I am by no means expert on Internet security best practices, so instead of trying to dispense advice, I am opening to subject to discussion, and hope to get some real feedback. Here are some of the options we all have:
- Use the same, or very few userid/password combos on all sites, so we can remember them without having to write them down or physically store them in any form. This may not have been that bad… years ago, when we all accessed less than a handful sites. With the proliferation of Web usage, this practice has become a timebomb waiting to explode.
- Use some variation of the basic credentials, simple enough to remember the actual “algorithm”, i.e. some characters from the site name combined with your own “standard” keywords. The benefit is that you use different credentials on every site (which you probably would not remember, but can re-construct every time), and still don’t need to record all the passwords. The weakness is that once the bad guys get hold of two-three sites, they can pretty much figure out your simple algorithm.
- Use different credentials on every site, preferably strong ones. The benefit is obvious, very secure, but it would be impossible to remember, so you would need to record them somewhere, whether on paper or electronic form, which itself is a huge security risk.
- Use different, strong credentials, and use a “password manager” system. There have been a number of client (PC) based solutions, or ones that code your information on a USB stick, but I don’t want to depend on anything tied to a physical location/device. I am experimenting with Web-based solutions, but am not fully convinced. OpenID got a huge boost today, with Yahoo adapting it. The system I am trying out is PassPack: here’s why Passpack’s founder thinks her solution is significantly different from OpenID. I can tell you it’s a hell of a pain to log in to PassPack – I guess it’s supposed to be that way. But other than the inconvenience, whether it’s Passpack, OpenID, or any online system, I am worried that if the info there ever gets compromised, it will expose everything.
With that, I’d like to turn this over to the security experts (I hope I have some amongst my readers). What do you think? What’s the ideal Web-login policy?
Update: How could I not think of this? (via Web Worker Daily)
Related posts: ReadWriteWeb, The Guardian, TechCrunch, Jeremy Zawodny’s blog, InfoWorld, Mark Evans, Compiler, CyberNet, Identity Woman, WeBreakStuff, Mashable!, Ars Technica, and many others.
Tags: id theft, openid, passpack, password manager, password security, web indentity, web login, web passwords, web security
Zoli Erdos