nanog mailing list archives

Re: de-peering for security sake


From: Baldur Norddahl <baldur.norddahl () gmail com>
Date: Sun, 27 Dec 2015 00:54:33 +0100

On 27 December 2015 at 00:11, Owen DeLong <owen () delong com> wrote:

No… You are missing the point. Guessing a private key is roughly
equivalent to guessing a really long
pass phrase. There is no way that the server side can enforce password
protection of the private key
on the client side, so if you are assuming that public-key authentication
is two-factor, then you are
failing miserably.


The key approach is still better. Even if the password is 123456 the
attacker is not going to get in, unless he somehow stole the key file.

Technically it is two-factor even if the user made one of the factors
really easy. And that might save the day if you have users that chooses bad
passwords.

The system is weak in that it is too easy to steal the key file. It is not
unlikely that a user with sloppy passwords is also sloppy with his key file.

Too bad ssh does not generally support a challenge-response protocol to a
write only hardware key device combined with server side passwords that can
be checked against a blacklist.

Regards,

Baldur


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