SOLO Enterprises Computer Service Orange County Daily Blog
949-361-1158


SOLOEnterprises Computer Service Orange County

Computer Service Orange County
High Quality Web Design
Reliable Website Hosting

 

This is the SOLOEnterprises, L.L.C. Blog. We do computer service in Orange County, computer repair in Orange County, web site design in Orange County and web hosting in Orange County. This is our daily blog of great news stories about computers and technology in general.

computer service

 

SOLOEnterprises, LLC is committed to keeping your computers running at their fullest potential.
Our motto "We Speak Your Language" really means something to us. Many companies can talk to your computer or network, but we can also talk to you, the client. If you are sick of speaking to computer geeks with no personality or ability to express ideas in non-technical language or worse, no English, then contact us. We pride ourselves on being computer experts that are also "normal" people.

SOLOEnterprises, L.L.C. proudly serves the Orange County area with computer service, network consulting and trouble shooting. If you or your business need computer service contact us for the lowest pricing and highest customer satisfaction in the area.

Contact us to find out what you have been missing with your old Orange County computer service company...

Tuesday, June 01, 2004

Complex Passwords Foil Hacks

As more websites demand passwords, scammers are getting cleverer about stealing them -- hence, the need for such "passwords-plus" systems.

To access her bank account online, Marie Jubran opens a web browser and types in her Swedish national ID number along with a four-digit password.

For additional security, she then pulls out a card that has 50 scratch-off codes. Jubran uses the codes, one by one, each time she logs on or performs a transaction. Her bank, Nordea PLC, automatically sends a new card when she's about to run out.

Scandinavian countries are among the leaders as many online businesses abandon static passwords in favor of so-called two-factor authentication.

"A password is a construct of the past that has run out of steam," said Joseph Atick, chief executive of Identix, a Minnesota designer of fingerprint-based authentication. "The human mind-set is not used to dealing with so many different passwords and so many different PINs."

When a static password alone is required, security experts recommend that users combine letters and numbers and avoid easy-to-guess passwords like "1234" or a nickname.

Stevan Hoffacker follows those rules but commits a different faux pas: He uses the same password everywhere, including access to multiple e-mail accounts, Amazon.com, The New York Times' website and E-ZPass electronic toll statements. In such cases, should hackers or scammers compromise one account, they potentially have one's entire online life.

"This is one of these things that if I stop and think about it, it is not good, but I do my best not to stop and think about it," said Hoffacker, an information technology manager in New York.

But it's difficult to remember dozens of strong passwords -- so many sites now require them. Alternatives include writing them down on a sticky note attached to a monitor or in an electronic spreadsheet -- practices security experts also deem unsafe.

Software such as Symantec's Norton Password Manager and Apple Computer's Keychain help store passwords in secure, encrypted form. But if you compromise the master password, you're out of luck. Your entire collection is gone.

Many sites, meanwhile, will e-mail passwords insecurely -- without encryption -- if you forget. A site called BugMeNot.com even encourages users to share passwords for nonfinancial sites like newspapers.

The tools of password harvesting are many: Keystroke recorders secretly installed at public Internet terminals can capture passwords, as can "phishing" e-mails designed to trick users into submitting sensitive data to fraudulent sites that look authentic. Some computer viruses are programmed to harvest passwords and some software guesses passwords by running through words in dictionaries.

Though analysts have no hard figures on password-specific fraud, they blame insecure passwords for unauthorized financial transfers, privacy breaches and even the hacking of corporate networks.

With two-factor authentication, having a password alone is useless.

"We will never play the fear factor here, but still it stays a fact that with our products, phishing is no longer an issue," said Jochem Binst of Vasco Data Security International.

The Belgian company issues devices the size of pocket calculators or keychains. You type your regular password into the device for a second code based on the time and the unit's unique characteristics. That's the code you type into the website.

Someone who steals your device won't have your password; someone who steals your password won't have your device.

MasterCard International. has been testing similar systems in Britain, Germany and Brazil. Swipe a credit card with a smart chip into a special reader, enter your PIN and obtain a password good only once at Office Max, British Airways and a dozen other merchants.

In Singapore, bank customers wishing to designate new accounts for fund transfers must likewise obtain a second password -- through a phone call, e-mail or mobile text messaging. Biometric systems are similar, except a fingerprint or iris scan replaces one or both passwords.

In the United States, use of two-factor authentication remains limited. RSA Security has several products, including RSA SecurID, but they are primarily issued to employees for remote network access and to customers with high-value portfolios.

"There's a delicate balance between maintaining security, but also providing customers with ease of use," said Doug Johnson, senior policy analyst at the American Bankers Association.

From Wired.com


SOLOEnterprises is your one stop shop for computer consulting in Orange County, web site design and web site hosting.
Remember our motto "We Speak YOUR Language"
Computer Service Orange County
Webdesign Orange County
Web Hosting Orange County

Powered by Blogger

Listed on Blogwise

Listed on Blog Search

Click Here to return to the SOLOEnterprises Home Page

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Acceptable Use | Site Map
copyright 2004 SOLOEnterprises, LLC ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Microsoft Certified Computer Service Orange CountyCisco Systems Computer Service Orange CountyH-Sphere Web Site HostingPowered by MySQLPowered by PHPPowered by Redhat

Computer Service Orange County Web Design Orange County Web Hosting Orange County
Dana Point Web Design Dana Point Computer Service
computer repair orange county computer consulting orange county orange county computer networking