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" ... And passwords are not good enough. Many passwords are guessable, and methods exist for stealing passwords; in a breach, credentials are among the first things that an intruder will look for. While enterprises may deploy the likes of multifactor authentication (MFA) to help somewhat, nobody wants to be locked out of every account after leaving their phone in an Uber. ... "
" ... For example, consider the accounts associated with your personal identity and the myriad of accounts associated with your corporate identity. These account names may be easily guessable if they are based on a simple template of your first initial and last name or obfuscated from a threat actor by using some form of patterned letters and numbers. It could also be a predefined alias like “administrator” and have a logical meaning to a resource but not intrinsically known to anyone outside of yourself. ... "
" ... How does this play out? Consider a report finding related to the ability to steal credentials, escalate them to a higher privilege and gain access to a sensitive server. A penetration tester may suggest addressing this through technical means (hardening the server to allow access from predetermined hosts, locking down workstations to reduce privilege escalation effectiveness and adding MFA). However, this could also be amended by enforcing two-person authorization for critical actions (breaking the ability to abuse a compromised account), using password managers (reducing the chances of reused or guessable passwords) or even increasing logging visibility (to provide the SOC with insights on privileged activities through the systems). These remediations are less likely to turn up on a penetration test report, however, they are just as effective -- if not more so -- than the classic ones that only address the common technical aspects of the issue. ... "
" ... So, while G5e*cbCy74Tm$*SZthE7igp7L is certainly difficult for a would-be attacker to guess or break using brute-force attack methods, it's all but impossible to remember. However, "FantasticYellowBowledHair" is the same length but a lot less complex and so much easier to visualize and thus recall. Importantly, it's just as hard for criminals to crack. The trick is to use unrelated words that can be combined into something that you can visualize, rather than related words that might be guessable as a phrase. The FBI recommends using passphrases of at least 15 characters, but I'd suggest stretching that to 25 characters because, well, why not? ... "
" ... The government also wants to move towards the use of "alternative authentication mechanisms" that do not use passwords. What's more, the policy paper also reveals that there is an intent to ban those passwords which are unique to every device but are still easily guessable. ... "