By
Tom Espiner
Thursday, September 15 2005 10:00 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,39254732,00.htm
Companies are "fiddling while Rome burns" by continuing to put their faith
in passwords to guarantee user authentication, a Gartner analyst has warned.
Speaking at the Gartner IT Security Summit in London on Wednesday, Ant Allan
said that "passwords are no longer adequate, as threats against them increase."
Those emerging threats are intimately linked to emerging technology such as Wi-Fi and Web services. As the usage of these services grows, more cybercriminals will attempt to exploit them. There is a business value in adopting new technology, but security needs to keep up,
according to Gartner.
The increasing sophistication of attacks and the professionalism of
cybercriminal gangs have led companies to make passwords longer, or to change
them more frequently. "This is a bad idea," said Jay Heiser, a Gartner research
vice president. "Users respond by forgetting passwords, or writing them down,
which can compromise security in a different way."
The future of
authentication is "something stronger," Allan said. "RSA security tokens,
smart cards and biometrics are becoming increasingly popular. The problem with
those methods is that they are expensive to implement," he said.
Some security experts have been urging companies to use two-factor
authentication--where users present a second form of identification as well as
their password--for some time, though not all agree it is the way forward.
Security guru Bruce Schneier summed up many of the arguments against two-factor authentication
in an interview earlier this year, saying: "People are selling two-factor
authentication as the solution to our current identity-theft problems, but it
was designed to solve the issues from 10 years ago."
"We are finding that European companies are more accepting of the higher cost
of these solutions, while the U.S. back away because they don't want to burden
users (with complex procedures)," Allan said.
Less-expensive
solutions include mobile phone tokens for one-time password authentication,
or ID cards.
Colin Thompson, vice president of enterprise sales at security company
Aladdin, agreed that companies will need to start tying in some kind of physical
ID with digital ID.
"To access your bank account, you need a bank card and PIN," he said. "If you
lose that card, you know your security has been compromised. We need some kind
of smart card or certification, because individual users in companies are still
at risk.
"Two-factor authentication is the way forward. Once you're into a system, we
need greater simplicity, though. No more different username and password for
different sites."
The risk of passwords being compromised is becoming greater and greater
because it's becoming easier to download tools that will crack them, said John
Girard, another Gartner analyst
"The 'Magical Jellybean' tool is downloadable, and will find your license key
if you've lost it," he told the audience at the security summit, referring to a
utility that is freely available over the Web.
"'Free Word and Excel password recovery wizard' enables you to crack
passwords by brute force. It's good for shorter passwords. Longer passwords take
about 16 hours, but if you really want to get in, you can," Girard warned.
The problem with most passwords is that there is nothing in the system to
stop you looking again and again, so they are susceptible to brute force, Girard
said.