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Home >> Information Architecture >> Identity Management

Users suffering password overload

Users suffering password overload

By:  Jeff Jedras  On: 10 Nov 2005 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The average corporate IT user is being asked to remember an increasing number of passwords and is resorting to insecure ways to remember them, thus opening the IT infrastructure to risk and placing a heavy burden on help desks, according to a recent survey.

“It drives me nuts, I’ve got I don’t know how many passwords and you can only come up with so many that you can remember and then you’ve got to start writing them down,” said Greene. “But if you have one for everything and someone compromises that, then you’re in trouble.”

Greene said he thinks medium and large companies are starting to pay attention to password security issues, driven partly by issues like compliance requirements. Depending on the legislation, he said it’s important companies know who has access to what information, and that there’s a paper trail.

“That’s how people are going to start coming to grips with these things,” said Greene. “I think you’re going to start seeing identity and access tools being used for (compliance), and over time, a secondary benefit could be password management.”

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Jeff Jedras Jeff Jedras joined CDN as a senior writer in 2007. While he was new to the channel he was no stranger to technology journalism, beginning his career in Ottawa with Silicon Valley NORTH in 1998, where he... more

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