Doubts cast over efficacy of two-factor authentication
Doubts cast over efficacy of two-factor authentication
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Hackers can beat security tokens

Two-factor authentication 'doesn't solve anything', claims security expert

Iain Thomson, vnunet.com 15 Mar 2005
ADVERTISEMENT

IT security expert Bruce Schneier has warned that plans to move to two-factor authentication will not solve online fraud.

Schneier pointed out that the tokens will not stop the most common types of attacks. Tokens can work well in corporate environments but will be ineffective against much of today's crime since it relies on tricking users rather than beating passwords.

"Two-factor authentication doesn't solve anything. It won't work for remote authentication over the internet," he said.

"I predict that banks and other financial institutions will spend millions fitting their users with two-factor authentication tokens.

"Early adopters of this technology may very well experience a significant drop in fraud for a while as attackers move to easier targets, but in the end there will be a negligible drop in the amount of fraud and identity theft."

He lists two attacks, man-in-the-middle and Trojans, which would not be stopped by the use of tokens. In the first case a hacker sets up a fraudulent phishing website such as a bank log-in page where the victim inputs their log in details anyway, and with Trojans the hacker would log in with the user, token or no token.

Last year online fraudsters stole $1.2bn in the US and there are fears that fraud is harming confidence in e-commerce.

Representatives of the British banking industry, police and the security industry met in January to discuss ways of fighting online fraud, including the introduction of tokens. Last year AOL launched a premium service for customers using the devices.

Microsoft announced yesterday that it is dropping passwords in favour of two-factor authentication.

See also:

InfoSecurity Europe 2005New threats demand new practices, warns security expert  26 Apr 2005
Gang installed key-logging software at Sumitomo CorporationHigh Tech Crime Unit smashes £220m hacking ring  17 Mar 2005
SecurityThe latest wave of cyber-crimes and acts of vandalism have demonstrated once again that many systems are still vulnerable to attack.  15 Apr 2004

All Hacking

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
| Foster Wheeler
Analyst Programmer - Applix TM1 -Competitive Salary - ReadingFoster Wheeler is a leading international project management, engineering and construction organisation with global construction capabilities working on major projects within upstream oil amp; LNG, refining, petrochemicals ... more >
| Foster Wheeler
Analyst Programmer - JDEdwards- ReadingFoster Wheeler is a leading international project management, engineering and construction organisation with global construction capabilities working on major projects within upstream oil amp; LNG, refining, petrochemicals lt;/p> Our UK-headquartered operations ... more >
| Google
The area: DoubleClick DoubleClick, a Google company, enables top marketers, publishers and agencies to utilize DoubleClick's expertise in ad serving, rich media, video and affiliate marketing to help them make the most of the digital ... more >
| Google
The area: Engineering Management Google's engineering teams exhibit high energy, deep technical skills and a drive to get things done. Our Engineering Managers need to be technical leaders and motivators who are comfortable leading these ... more >
More job opportunities