Someone sent the following to me as an example of how to ensure secure passwords
Microsoft claims
this message is an error. However, I think we all can see this is simply a form of extreme password security of the sort I wrote about in
this post.
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Tuesday, October 24, 2006 by
Ed Finkler in
R&D,
I decided to not be all self-deprecating as I usually am with things like this, and admit that I'm really happy and proud to say that I was interviewed by Cal Evans for the
Zend Developer Zone.
I guess the first question that comes to my mind is "Why did you build this?"
I built it because there was no good way to audit the security settings in your PHP.INI or your PHP environment. The average PHP user I feel is someone who can use an installer to install scripts on their server, get them running and do a little customization or hack up some code but they are not educated developers. These users have no easy way to check how secure their environment is. So I wrote PHPSecInfo to give these uses something easy to run and present the information in a format they are already familiar with.
Read the rest »
Also, I uploaded a new build of PHPSecInfo this morning. This version fixes the errant Notices we were getting, makes it easier to extract test data for your own nefarious purposes, and fixes a bug with the curl file protocol test on PHP4. The latter unfortunately just skips the test on PHP4 because I'm not sure how to do the check; suggestions are welcome.
Download:
http://phpsec.org/projects/phpsecinfo/phpsecinfo.zip
Docs:
http://phpsec.org/projects/phpsecinfo/docs/
What's new:
v0.1.1
- Added PhpSecInfo::getOutput(), PhpSecInfo::loadAndRun() and PhpSecInfo::getResultsAsArray() methods
- Modified PhpSecInfo::runTests() to fix undefined offsent notices
- Modified PhpSecInfo_Test::setMessageForResult() to fix undefined offset notices
- Modified PhpSecInfo_Test_Curl_File_Support to skip if PHP version is
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Friday, October 20, 2006 by
Ed Finkler in
R&D,
So we finally went public with
PHPSecInfo as an official project of the
PHP Security Consortium.
I just was interviewed by
Cal Evans for the
Zend Developer Zone, which was pretty cool -- it was nice to talk to him again. He said the story should be posted sometime this weekend or Monday.
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In my earlier posts on passwords, I noted that I approach on-line password “vaults” with caution. I have no reason to doubt that the many password services, secure email services, and other encrypted network services are legitimate. However, I am unable to adequately verify that such is the case for anything I would truly want to protect. It is also possible that some employee has compromised the software, or a rootkit has been installed, so even if the service was designed to be legitimate, it is nonetheless compromised without the rightful owners knowledge.
For a similar reason, I don't use the same password at multiple sites -- I use a different password for each, so if one site is “dishonest” (or compromised) I don't lose security at all my sites.
For items that I don't value very much, the convenience of an online vault service might outweigh my paranoia -- but that hasn't happened yet.
Today I ran across this:
MyBlackBook [ver 1.85 live] - Internet's First Secure & Confidential Online Sex Log!
My first thought is “Wow! What a way to datamine information on potential hot dates!” :-)
That quickly led to the realization that this is an *incredible* tool for collecting blackmail information. Even if the people operating it are legit (and I have no reason to doubt that they are anything but honest), this site will be a prime target for criminals.
It may also be a prime target for lawyers seeking information on personal damages, divorce actions, and more.
My bottom line: don't store things remotely online, even in “secure” storage, unless you wouldn't mind that they get published in a blog somewhere -- or worse. Of course, storing online locally with poor security is not really that much better.....
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See this account of how someone modified some roadside signs that were password protected. Oops! Not the way to protect a password. Even the aliens know that.
ZUG: Comedy Articles: Electronic Road Signs and Me:
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