Organisations that had software tokens had a higher incidence of break-ins than those that had no two-factor system
Companies could be making themselves more vulnerable by using software-based two-factor authentication

Poor authentication increases risk of identity fraud

Software tools can make problems worse, says consultant

Written by Iain Thomson

The latest survey from the DTI into the IT security of UK businesses has revealed that firms could be making themselves more vulnerable by using software-based two-factor authentication rather than hardware tokens.

Software tokens, where a small file is placed on a user's computer, have been adopted by many firms as a relatively cheap way of increasing security. Telecoms and technology companies are the highest adopters.

But Chris Potter, the partner at PricewaterhouseCoopers who compiled the survey, told vnunet.com that in some cases such systems led to more identity theft not less.

"Two-factor authentication is the most popular form of control, but there's a little bit of a sting in the tale," he said.

"Organisations that had software tokens had a higher incidence of break-ins than those that had no two-factor system.

"One reason could be that organisations implement stronger security once breached, but the other possible reason is that software tokens provide limited security and people may feel they are totally covered."

Potter explained that the levels of identify fraud fall back to normal when hardware tokens were used.

Tim Pickard, vice president of international marketing at RSA Security, said: "I haven't has access to this report but it doesn't ring true to me.

"There are some very large organisations that use software tokens and they don't suffer those levels of breaches. Our experience is that breaches going up is a relatively small possibility."

The survey identified three elements to a successful identity management system: strong, ideally two-factor, authentication; single sign on; and automated user provisioning.

Companies using all three elements suffered negligible identity fraud, according to Potter, but only one in every 100 companies is this well protected.

Two-factor is the most popular form of identity management, but 80 per cent of the 1,000 companies surveyed are still using passwords alone to provide access rights.

Overall the level of identity fraud stayed relatively constant, due in part to increased security precautions. Among large companies there was a small increase.

When such fraud did occur, it tended to have a worse impact than any other type of security breach, particularly in terms of reputation damage, adverse media coverage and cost of remediation.

Several small businesses reported direct losses of £10,000 - £50,000 as a result of fraud.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

Home Office

Government 'overstated' ID fraud figures

Losses drop, not rise, according to Apacs 03 Feb 2006

 

Half of UK adults fear ID theft

Londoners most at risk as internet fraud soars 21 Mar 2005

Liberty Alliance tackles ID theft

Taskforce to concentrate on user education and better security policies 17 Jun 2005

Infosec: UK firms winning security battle

New survey shows incidence and costs of attacks falling 22 Apr 2008

RSA event to launch security push

Annual security conference will cover Web 2.0 risks and breach notification laws 22 Oct 2007

Review 2007: IT in financial services

Computing looks at the big stories in financial services IT in our review of the past year 18 Dec 2007

today's top stories

Analysis: Will IE8 cause more problems than it solves?

Microsoft's new browser may lead to compatibility issues and affect online advertising 29 Aug 2008

CIO morale plummets as crunch hits

Fewer opportunities and less responsibility depress IT managers 27 Aug 2008

The pIT stop Q&A: Should packaged software users adopt SOA?

Our expert panel answer readers' questions 29 Aug 2008

Computing podcast 28 August 2008

CIO job satisfaction plummets, and why schools' IT spending is set to top £1bn 28 Aug 2008

The definitive guide to collaboration

Five key technologies and five best practice tips to improve your collaborative IT 28 Aug 2008

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job 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 recruit a student with an IT degree?

Would you recruit a student with an IT degree?

As IT student numbers plummet - would you recruit an IT graduate?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

A stressed CIOAudio

Computing podcast 28 August 2008

CIO job satisfaction plummets, and why schools' IT spending is set to top £1bn 28 Aug 2008

Bryan Glick video whiteboardVideo

The definitive guide to collaboration

Five key technologies and five best practice tips to improve your collaborative IT 28 Aug 2008

Latest in-depth articles

Myron HrycykAnalysis

General management skills are now as important as technical ability

A selection of leading chief information officers talk about what they see as the most important aspects of the role 28 Aug 2008

Internet Explorer logoAnalysis

Analysis: Will IE8 cause more problems than it solves?

Microsoft's new browser may lead to compatibility issues and affect online advertising 29 Aug 2008

Primary Navigation