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All About PASSWORDS

 

All about PASSWORDS

 

In Last blog, I discussed about 70 day password policy. In the blog entry I will try all about passwords. Characteristics of passwords, strong passwords policy, List of Don’ts etc.

 

Passwords are an important aspect of computer security. Implementation of secure passwords is an important component of securing the enterprise from unauthorized access.  They are the front line of protection for user Accounts. A poorly chosen password may result in the compromise of Company Name's entire corporate network

As the complexity of computing in the 21st century increases, the need for advanced security measures is on everyone's mind. But not all security measures require an advanced degree in security to implement. An often ignored step that everyone can take to significantly reduce their risk of identity theft, stolen data is the use of strong passwords. A breach in one person's computer puts every other computer on our network at risk.

 

Poor, weak passwords have the following characteristics:

 

• Password contains less than 8 characters

Password is a word found in a dictionary (English or foreign)

Password is a common usage word such as:

ü  Names of family, pets, friends, co-workers, fantasy characters, etc.

ü  Computer terms and names, commands, sites, companies, hardware, software.

ü  The words "Company Name", "Microsoft", "microsoft123" or any derivation.

ü  Birthdays and other personal information such as addresses and phone numbers.

ü  Word or number patterns like aaabbb, asdflkj, abcdefg, 123321, etc.

ü  Any of the above spelled backwards.

ü  Any of the above preceded or followed by a digit (e.g., secret1, 1secret)

ü  Passwords must contain any recognizable part of the user’s name. like username=ABC@1234 password=ABC

ü  Repeating characters like “MS1111”, DELL2222, a110011 etc.

ü  Passwords must not match any portion of your full name.

 

 

Strong passwords have the following characteristics:

 

·         Passwords must be at least 8 characters long and contain all of the following: 

o   Letters: upper or lower case (A,B,C,…Z: a,b,c,…z)

o   Digits: (0,1,2,3,…9)

o   Intersperse punctuation marks or symbols such as #, !, %, etc.

 

·         Use passphrase (“My password is Strong enough for 1 year”=” MpiSef1y”).

·         Are not a word in any language, slang, dialect, jargon, etc.

·         Are not based on personal information, names of family, etc.

·         Passwords should never be written down or stored on-line.

Try to create passwords that can be easily remembered. One way to do this is create a password based on a song title, affirmation, or other phrase. For example, the phrase might be: "My password is Strong enough for 1 year" and the password could be: "MpiSef1y" or” MpiSef1y ~" or some other variation.

 

 

Here is a list of "dont":

Ä      Don't reveal a password over the phone to ANYONE

Ä      Don't reveal a password to co-workers while on vacation

Ä      Don't reveal a password in an email message

Ä      Don't talk about a password in front of others

Ä      Don't hint at the format of a password (e.g., "my family name")

Ä      Don't reveal a password on questionnaires or security forms

Ä      Don't share a password with family members

Ä      Don’t transmit User names and passwords together in an unencrypted format.

Ä      Don’t add your passwords in Trouble tickets.

Ä      Don’t Store Passwords in readable form in batch files, automatic log-in scripts, software macros, terminal function keys, in computers without access control, or in other locations where unauthorized persons might discover them.

Ä      Don’t use vendor/mfg supplied default passwords.

Ä      Do not use a password that you are using for some other purpose, such as your PIN at the bank or your password to another system.

 

Useful tips

 

·       All accounts (including service accounts, IIS anonymous user accounts and administrator accounts) must be configured to require password changes at least once every 70 days.

·       Passwords must be significantly different from prior passwords.  Users must not use “recurring” passwords, i.e., passwords that contain the same basic content as previous passwords, but with only a part of the content changed. Pwd1=ABC@12 pwd2= ABC@123, pwd3= ABC@1234 etc

·       Passwords must be promptly changed if they are suspected of being known by unauthorized individuals.

·      Group policies enabling checks for password complexity requirements and password history (24) must be enabled for all accounts. 

 

 

Posted: Monday, June 29, 2009 4:39 PM by Mahavir Sancheti

Comments

Pazu said:

You forgot to tell, that you are describing the domain password, which is ONLY SINGLE ONE. Have seen RDP6 client ? Saving passwords is quite common now.

# June 29, 2009 7:28 AM

Balaji said:

Nice Blog.. Mr Jain..

you have explained in a simple fashion..

good..

# July 3, 2009 10:09 AM
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