Security Basics mailing list archives

RE: ADS Password Storage Protection


From: "Roger A. Grimes" <roger () banneretcs com>
Date: Thu, 20 Jul 2006 09:14:43 -0400

Yes, as long as I didn't know that was your password.

To second my yes, most password crackers don't guess sequentially, they
guess randomly (birthday attack theory), so it's not even like
aaaaaaaaaaaaa would come be guaranteed to up first before
5adf,nasa73@#$. A dictionary attack would fail, so only brute force or
luck could find it.

I think it would be a strange logon, easy to recreate, for someone
shoulder surfing though.

-----Original Message-----
From: Harold Winshel [mailto:winshel () camden rutgers edu] 
Sent: Thursday, July 20, 2006 6:17 AM
To: Roger A. Grimes; Depp, Dennis M.; security-basics () securityfocus com
Subject: RE: ADS Password Storage Protection

Please correct me if I'm wrong.  If length is the tool for a secure
windows passphrase then, in theory, a password of "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaa" 
should be just as strong as a 15-character password consisting of random
characters?

Thanks,



At 02:55 PM 7/18/2006, Roger A. Grimes wrote:
My conjecture is that franklyidon'tgiveadamn is pretty uncrackable as 
well. No complexity, but length prevents it from being easily 
broken...non-trivial.  Pull out the complexity and the length is still 
insurmountable in most cases.

If you don't believe that then break my 123456789012345 length, no 
complexity challenges.

-----Original Message-----
From: Depp, Dennis M. [mailto:deppdm () ornl gov]
Sent: Tuesday, July 18, 2006 8:36 AM
To: winshel () camden rutgers edu; security-basics () securityfocus com
Subject: RE: ADS Password Storage Protection

The phrase you gave, "frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn" meets most

definitions of complexity.  I has upper and lower case letters and 
special characters.

Dennis

-----Original Message-----
From: winshel () camden rutgers edu [mailto:winshel () camden rutgers edu]
Sent: Saturday, July 15, 2006 12:25 AM
To: security-basics () securityfocus com
Subject: Re: RE: ADS Password Storage Protection

I've read and heard many sources say this same thing, i.e., that, for 
windows systems, length is stronger than short and complex.  And that a
15 character or longer password can be a real phrase and it will be a 
secure password.


I can see why a long password that consists of a real phrase - such as 
"frankly, my dear, I don't give a damn" - would be just as secure as an

equally long complex password, in terms of protection against a brute 
force attack.


I don't know much about password cracking programs but am surprised 
that, while they would be working  on a brute force attack, they 
wouldn't be able to try a lot of commonly-used phrases at the same
time.


If some password cracking programs can use a dictionary attack, 
couldn't there also be something called a passphrase attack?  Would it 
be difficult for a password cracker to digitize Bartlett's Book of 
Quotations and include that in an attack on a password?

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-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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This list is sponsored by: SensePost

Hacking, like any art, will take years of dedicated study and practice 
to master. We can't teach you to hack. But we can teach you what we've 
learned so far. Our courses are honest, real, technical and practical.
SensePost willl be at Black Hat Vegas in July. To see what we're about,

visit us at:

http://www.sensepost.com/training.html
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Harold Winshel
Computing and Instructional Technologies Faculty of Arts & Sciences
Rutgers University, Camden Campus
311 N. 5th Street, Room B36 Armitage Hall Camden NJ 08102
(856) 225-6669 (O)


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