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Home >> Government >> Case Studies and Best Practices From Canada and Internationally

By a factor of two

By a factor of two

By:  Richard Bray  On: 06 Mar 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

As the baby boomers hit retirement age, a new cohort of employees will arrive for work at every government in Canada. IT security managers can make some assumptions about the new crop. They are already knowledgeable about computers, the Internet, cellular telephones and PDAs. They have smoothly integrated technology into every aspect of their lives. They will expect the same high level of speed, flexibility and utility they have in their personal systems. Most importantly, they will devote their greatest ingenuity to defeating any IT security system that they perceive as slow and clumsy.

Writing down passwords is a people problem. The solution may be people-friendly technology. Token-based two-factor authentication is a proven technology and the costs are coming down. In spy novels, the “one-time pad” is a staple, because it almost guarantees absolute security. If the agent sending an encrypted message from the field and the spymasters decoding it at headquarters have the same one-time pad, a sequence of random text, the communication is virtually unbreakable. The drawback, of course, is the need to make sure the field agent always has a supply of one-time pads.

In the IT security world, the token takes the place of the one-time pad. When issued, a sequence of passcodes is installed on a USB flash drive, calculator-like keypad or keychain fob. When users log on, they press a button to see the next passcode in the sequence and enter it along with a PIN number. Using their PIN number demonstrates something they know, one factor of authentication, and entering the correct passcode tells the system they do indeed possess a second factor of authentication, something they have. Token-based two-factor authentication means that each password is unique. If someone steals a login name and password by “shoulder-surfing,” that password will never be used again.

As with any technology, managers need to look at the end-to-end costs of two-factor authentication, not just the sticker price for the initial roll-out. And like any technology, there is a standards battle under way, with no moral high ground. Industry leaders want the stamp of approval while smaller players want their distinct competitive advantage chiselled in stone.

Even if the implementation of two-factor authentication does not appear to be a distinct possibility on the organizational radar now, security managers should start strategically planning for it in architecture decisions now. Decisions about enhanced security are, in the polite phrase, “incident-driven.” Systems that aren’t demonstrably broken never get repaired. But breakdowns, especially publicly visible ones, call for a quick response. Managers might want to have their purchase orders ready for that opportunity. 064197

Richard Bray (rbray@itworldcanada.com) is an Ottawa-based freelance journalist specializing in high technology and security issues.










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Richard Bray Richard Bray is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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