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Why changing password regularly may do more harm than good

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By Andrea Peterson March 2
Most office drones have had to deal with a job that requires them to keep changing their passwords like clockwork, maybe every six months or so. The longstanding IT security practice is based on the idea that flushing out old passwords will cut off access for bad guys who may have figured them out.
But according to the Federal Trade Commission's chief technologist, Lorrie Cranor, the strategy has some major holes.
"Unless there is reason to believe a password has been compromised or shared, requiring regular password changes may actually do more harm than good in some cases," Cranor wrote Wednesday in a blog post entitled "Time to rethink mandatory password changes."
That's because forcing people to keep changing their passwords can result in workers coming up with, well, bad passwords.
That point is supported by research Cranor conducted at Carnegie Mellon University. It found that users who felt the institution's password policy was annoying came up with passwords that were 46 percent more likely to be guessed than those who supported frequent password changes.
Other research suggests that such password changes may not actually help keep bad guys out for long.
Although password expiration can help reduce the fallout "of some password compromises,"a 2009 publication from the National Institute of Standards and Technology explained, it's also "a source of frustration to users."
And because those users are "are often required to create and remember new passwords every few months for dozens of accounts," they "tend to choose weak passwords and use the same few passwords for many accounts," according to NIST.
In a 2010 study cited by Cranor, researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill looked at a data set of thousands of old passwords belonging to former students, faculty and staff at the university who had to change their password every three months.
They found that users often followed patterns that linked old passwords to new passwords -- such as swapping the order of meaningful numbers and letters, replacing a letter with a common number or symbol substitute (think changing an E into a 3), or adding or removing special characters like exclamation marks.
Using a tool they designed to predict those type of changes, the researchers could predict how users would change their passwords for 41 percent of the accounts in less than three seconds using a relatively low-powered computer. The researchers also determined passwords for 17 percent of the accounts in fewer than five guesses.
Another 2013 study, by researchers at Carleton University, also noted that in some cases, an attacker installed software that spies on users as they type. So changing a password in this scenario has no benefit. The attacker will just be able to scoop up the new password the next time they log in.
None of this means changing passwords is always a bad idea. Cranor notes a number of reasons why mixing it up could be a good thing -- if you think your password has been stolen, if you're reusing passwords across different services, or even if your password is just plain weak.
But despite the conventional wisdom, it's not clear that forcing users to change passwords on a regular basis actually makes sense for all workplaces.
A better idea may be for employers to explore log-in options that go beyond basic passwords -- such as biometrics or two-factor methods that require users to also prove who they are by plugging unique codes sent via text for each log-in.
"In the longer term, we believe our study supports the conclusion that simple password-based authentication should be abandoned outright," the UNC researchers wrote.


1楼2016-03-05 16:49回复
    原文链接:https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-switch/wp/2016/03/02/the-case-against-the-most-annoying-security-measure-virtually-every-workplace-uses/?postshare=7481457019956338&tid=ss_mail
    如果大家不知道怎么发表评论,请点击原文,页面上有外国人的Comment,方便大家学习。


    2楼2016-03-05 16:53
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      2026-02-04 07:19:06
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      I had experiences of forgetting my own passwords when I was required to create passwords combining numbers, letters (sometimes capitalized letter), underscore characters, etc.


      3楼2016-03-06 09:24
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        来自iPhone客户端4楼2016-03-06 21:21
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          Exactly right... I buy those words. Password policy sounds ridiculous for one is likely to do their least when he is ordered to do so. Password is a kind of PERSONAL affairs. I am saying every individual has its own choice to these stuff without being limited by others. With that many disgusting codes need memorizing, I may easily get annoyed.
          A better way to avoid being stolen, I think, is to keep away from some malicious sites and something likewise that will spy the user. We are supposed to solve this problem by souring its origin rather than barking up the wrong tree. Don’t you think so?


          来自Android客户端5楼2016-03-06 22:49
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            Sounds reasonable. Though I've never experienced that. It'll be a nightmare for me to do so for I'm kind of old-fashioned and don't like to change so often. And it also makes me insecure and uncomfortable.


            来自Android客户端6楼2016-03-07 13:20
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              Changing the passwords is a so trouble thing for me.After did that,I would easily forget the new passwords.In my opinion,we really don't have to turn your passwords more complex or change them regularly.Or you will regret about what you had done!


              IP属地:广东来自Android客户端7楼2016-03-08 16:32
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                Actually,I don‘t like the move that changing my passwords .I thing it will make no difference whitout troubling myself .When I was a Junior high school student,I favor changing my password weekly .However
                I just always forgot it。。。。。Now I haven’t changed my psaawords for a long time .


                8楼2016-03-08 21:48
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                  2026-02-04 07:13:06
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                  First,I think changing password is necessary when our information is exposed to strangers.But change it regularly isn't a wisdom decision,people's memory is limited that can't remember everything well.We have so many things to do in a day,and we also have enough passwords to remember,like QQ password、credit card password and so on.If there isn't anything occured we can keep our password in case that forget it.


                  9楼2016-03-12 15:59
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                    I remember a trick from a video. It says, a favorite sentence will do good. For example, "Huang Xiaoming Loves Angelababy" can be adapted into "HXMLAB".


                    10楼2016-03-13 11:56
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