Neil Barrett
Neil Barrett

Complex passwords made easy

The password is often the first line of online defence, but is also often very simple to crack

Written by Neil Barrett

Take a moment to think about your signature. If it's anything like mine, it's a near-indecipherable mix of loops and lines; something that started out being more or less legible has over the years deteriorated into a lazy, hasty scrawl which is unique to you. And it's that uniqueness which gives your signature it's validity as an identification and authentication token.

Now, imagine that you were foolish enough to spend days and days carefully coaching me in how to duplicate your writing perfectly. Not simply giving me a copy of your signature from which to work, but actively demonstrating and critiquing my performance until I was perfect in every way in copying it. And perhaps, just to add the icing to the cake, you then give me your chequebook and your bank card. Until the money ran out in your account, I could be you.

Stupid? Of course. But in the online world, that is what your password does. If I have your password, I have your account; and if I have your account then as far as the computer is concerned, I am you.

As a second example, imagine that you decide to change your signature from the complex whorl of lines and scribbles, to something made up of simple, Roman-style capital letters. Your signature would now be one that I can easily copy; and again, I could be you as far as the bank is concerned. This, of course, is the real-world situation corresponding to a simple, short password such as your first name.

This happens often online. Users choose simple passwords; they share them with one another or, if the password is difficult or is forced on them, they write it down. Passwords form the first and best line of defence against "identity theft", but are almost universally misused.

To be effective, the password must be something which is hard to duplicate and must be private, like the way you write your signature.

There are some simple, easily remembered ways in which passwords can be made much more effective. A successful password must be complicated but memorable; for added security, a different password should be used for different services - one for Hotmail, another for the network. My passwords have two components: a common core phrase, alongside a mnemonic for the service to which it is applied. It has numbers, punctuation marks and a mix of upper and lower cases. It would take years to reproduce through brute force, but remains something that I can remember and reproduce quickly.

For example, say the core phrase is "bedtime"; I can write this as 9beD!tiMe#. This is hard to reproduce. For Hotmail, it might be hot9beD!tiMe#mail; for the network, net9beD!tiMe#work - subject to any password length restrictions. The result is a password I can remember but which is very hard to reproduce; nearly as good as the scrawl on my bank card.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

Pets' names most common UK passwords

Users ignore security advice and stick with sentimental log-ins, finds survey 12 Aug 2004

 

Pets' names most common UK passwords

Users ignore security advice and stick with sentimental log-ins, finds survey 12 Aug 2004

Security

The latest wave of cyber-crimes and acts of vandalism have demonstrated once again that many systems are still vulnerable to attack. 15 Apr 2004

related whitepapers

today's top stories

Best practice: Five steps to achieving your e-commerce goals

Brian Walker of Forrester Research gives his top tips for ensuring e-commerce success 06 Jul 2009

Google meets the NHS? Politicians show their IT naivety again

The Tories like technology. They increasingly seem to think IT is going to help them win the General Election due next year.... 06 Jul 2009

How to maximise the value of your IT networking investment

A panel of experts discuss networking strategies that deliver real value to business 03 Jul 2009

Reaching the email zero count

I have noticed something quite bizarre today. Both my inboxes (work and personal) are empty – somehow I have managed to work... 06 Jul 2009

Habitat gets a web site makeover

The furniture retailer is revamping its online presence to provide a fully transactional web site. CIO Jacques Dekock explains why 02 Jul 2009

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

More available - click 'submit' to view

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Would you use social networking sites to look for a job?

Would you use social networking sites to look for a job?

Tell us what you think about job hunting through LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter etc

View poll results

Latest audio and video articles

network cablesVideo

How to maximise the value of your IT networking investment

A panel of experts discuss networking strategies that deliver real value to business 03 Jul 2009

green footprintsVideo

How to manage enterprise energy use - and the role IT can play

A panel of experts explore how firms can get to grips with their carbon footprint and make smarter use of energy 01 Jul 2009

Latest in-depth articles

Phil PavittAnalysis

From tracks man to tax man

Phil Pavitt, outgoing chief information officer for Transport for London, talks to Rosalie Marshall about the lessons he will take to his new role at HMRC 02 Jul 2009

UPS worker making a deliveryAnalysis

Global standardisation delivers benefits at UPS

Delivery giant sees benefits of central IT solution 02 Jul 2009

Advertisement

Primary Navigation