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Network Security Doesn’t Have To Be A Burden
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| Guest post by: Dovell Bonnett |
Article Overview: Whenever I log onto my computer, visit a subscriber web sites or check my emails I always get the screen “Please enter your User Name and Password”. To manage this authentication barrage I might use the same logon information for all my sites, make the passwords simply to remember and keep the same password for years. Now my company’s IT department has decided to increase security by making me change my logon password every 60 days, make it more than 8 characters long and it has to contain both numeric or special characters. Security is a necessary burden. But, does security really need to be a burden?
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Free Download - Zappos Data Breach - Customer Safety and Security By Dovell Bonnett |
Network Security Doesn’t Have To Be A Burden
Whenever I log onto my computer, visit a subscriber web sites or check my emails I always get the screen “Please enter your User Name and Password”. To manage this authentication barrage I might use the same logon information for all my sites, make the passwords simply to remember and keep the same password for years. Now my company’s IT department has decided to increase security by making me change my logon password every 60 days, make it more than 8 characters long and it has to contain both numeric or special characters. Security is a necessary burden. But, does security really need to be a burden?
Of course there are times that I forget my password so I have to call IT and wait a few hours for them to reset my password. To make sure that I don’t forget them again I might write those passwords on post-it notes and stick them under my keyboard. Now that’s security since no one would ever think to look there! Does any of this sound familiar? Are you or your employees guilty of these same habits?
These practices violate all four of the golden rules to keeping passwords secure: 1) never use simple words or names that others can guess, 2) never writing down your passwords where others can find them, 3) never use the same password everywhere, and 4) never keep the same password for long periods of time.
What makes this whole tale more ironic is that I am in the computer security business. I know all the proper procedures, I know how hackers attacked computer systems and I know that over 70% of all identity theft occurs from co-workers, friends and even family members. But I am also human and trying to remember and type all my passwords is inconvenient, error prone and time consuming. So I decided to look for a way to make security so convenient that it no longer needed to be circumvented.
I now use a smartcard-based password manager that is easy to use and it allows me to easily manage all my digital identities on multiple computers and networks while exponentially increasing my security. Every one of my accounts now has its own long, unique, complex password that I don’t have to remember let alone type. Finally, smartcard based password managers protect computers from malicious software like spyware and keyloggers. Instead of “Dovell1″, my new password might be sdRy^k6()keHY. While I’m not totally password free since I still had to remember the one to authenticate me to the smartcard, I went from 98 different passwords down to 1.
It doesn’t matter if you use Power LogOn, RoboForm, VaultID or a host of any other token-based password manager products. The key is to use something, and make sure the product implement security features that protects your passwords if the token is ever lost or stolen.
In conclusion, I would add one more rule to the four golden rules:
GOLDEN RULE 5: Use a smartcard-based token to save passwords.
Article Tags: Access Smart, Dovell Bonnett, indentity theft, password, security
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About the Author: Dovell Bonnett RSS for Dovell's articles - Visit Dovell's website Founded in 2005 and headquartered in Ladera Ranch, California, Access Smart delivers Access-as-a-Service (AaaS) solutions by way of a password manager for Windows authentication to reduce the risk of cyber-attacks. Access Smart implements AaaS using contact or contactless smartcards, magnetic stripe or 125kHz Prox technologies. The value that Access Smart brings is to offer more security functions and affordability onto a single employee ID badge. Security does not have to be cumbersome to be affective. That is why our products are designed using state-of-the-art security technologies while focusing on ease-of-use and low cost-of -ownership. Previously, smartcard technology was only available to governments and Fortune 500 companies. Access Smart has turned that model upside down by matching the technology to the needs, no annual subscription fees and fully transferable licenses to keep security affordable to even high employee/student turnover businesses. The Access Smart team has over 50 combined years in the smartcard and security industry. By addressing the very real problems from a systems mindset, Access Smart delivers everything for a company to implement AaaS within hours and not months/years. Please contact Dovell Bonnett at Access Smart as to discuss how best to implement Authentication, Authorization and Non-Repudiation into your business. Access Smart - The Alternative to PKI. Click here to visit Dovell's website The Growing Threat of Medical Identity Theft AccessAsAService AAAS By Access Smart Schools and Universities Can Afford Smartcards Too Preventing Physical Identity Theft The Law May Consider Your Business a Bank |
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