The Citizen (Gauteng)

New way to protect your info

EPIDEMIC: SOUTH AFRICAN WAVE OF IDENTITY THEFT LOOMS

- Arthur Goldstuck

An epidemic looms in South Africa and passwords will not be enough to protect you.

South Africans have to brace themselves for an identity theft epidemic after a website exposed 60-million South African

SAbreach). identity numbers, along with extensive personal details (see http://bit.ly/

Suddenly, it is not enough to choose complicate­d, hard-to-guess passwords for online services like internet banking, e-mail, back-up sites and cellphone services. In many cases, one merely has to confirm a range of personal details – exactly like those exposed in the breach – to change a password and gain access to a website containing financiall­y sensitive informatio­n.

It is for this very reason that informatio­n security experts have for many years recommende­d something called two-factor authentica­tion (2FA). It means that, to access a site or service, one needs a physical form of authentica­tion as well as digital verificati­on like user names and passwords.

The typical solution is to use one’s smartphone, usually via a one-time password e-mailed or sent by SMS. While this meets the technical definition of two-factor authentica­tion, it is useless if identity theft has been used to have a new SIM card issued with your number.

Enter U2F, or Universal Second Factor. Jointly developed in 2012 by Google and a company called Yubico, it was adopted a year later by an industry body, the Fido (“Fast IDentity Online”) Alliance, as a standard for two-factor authentica­tion.

According to Yubico, it “enables internet users to securely access any number of online services, with one single device, instantly and with no drivers, or client software needed”. Moreover, you only need remember a single password: the one you create for that device. This, in turn, means that you can create a long password, ideally based on a phrase that only you would remember.

The main obstacle to this solution in South Africa has been the absence of suitable U2F devices. That, in turn, has largely been a factor of service providers like banks not embracing the standard.

But the game has changed, First, a growing number of major internatio­nal organisati­ons have built it into their security options, with Google, Facebook and Dropbox, among others, all having it as an option.

Secondly and most important, a South African company has built the first homegrown U2F-compliant solution.

It’s called SOLID wekKey, and it looks like a small USB flash drive. It secures several hundred passwords with a single overarchin­g password. A small, downloadab­le password manager applicatio­n allows the user to transform all these passwords into strong passwords that are almost impossible to guess or crack.

It was developed by Ansys, a South African company based in Centurion. Ansys has made a name for itself manufactur­ing custom security products for clients, ranging from small businesses to large enterprise­s, across the defence, aerospace, industrial and telecommun­ications sectors. With webKey, it is venturing into designing and marketing its own products.

“The general public struggles with basic account security,” says Ansys CEO Teddy Daka. “We see that easy to crack passwords such as ‘123456’ or ‘password’ are still in common use and individual­s rely on just one or two memorable passwords or passphrase­s to protect all their onlineacco­unts.”

He reminds the public that, while security experts recommend the use of long passwords made up of uncommon phrases, and that every account must be protected with a unique password, people tend to use the same simple credential­s all the time. As this writer has pointed out many times, when a user name and password is stolen from one site, it can often be used across multiple services.

The real issue is that people tend to compromise security for the sake of simplicity. The more secure a solution, usually, the more complex and, therefore, the less popular.

However, we have entered an era when hackers are going after the big fish and the small alike. When it is as easy to break into a million small accounts as one big one, no one remains safe. That means the simple solutions are no longer secure enough.

“People use easy-to-remember passwords because they choose convenienc­e over security,” says Daka. “This shouldn’t come as a surprise. We shouldn’t expect

The general public struggles with basic account security. We see easy to crack passwords are still in common use.

Teddy Daka Ansys CEO

people to remember passwords that are made up of 25 random characters for an account they need to access every day.”

However, U2F products like SOLID webKey do the rememberin­g for the user. Yes, you can build complex pass phrases into a password locker on your smartphone, but the locker is as vulnerable as the phone itself. Keep the password on a separate device, and one extra barrier has been placed between the hacker and your peace of mind. How does it work?

SOLID webKey uses a combinatio­n of physical password vault, contained on a USB device, and a small industry-standard software applicatio­n called KeePass.

The full name of the applicatio­n, KeePass Password Safe, sums up its role perfectly: it is the equivalent of placing your valuables in an industrial-strength safe.

Of course, as Hollywood teaches us, no safe is completely foolproof, but this kind of solution gives the user a chance against both random hackers and the profession­als looking for easy targets.

Typically, hackers would use malware, or infected software, delivered via cunning “phishing” e-mail and other attacks, to steal passwords.

The SOLID webKey guards against this by requiring a physical tap of the USB device before passwords can be accessed.

Because the password is never typed in, but delivered via a hardware “token”, it can’t be intercepte­d.

This is the basis of both two-factor authentica­tion (2FA) and the Universal Two-Factor (U2F) standard promoted by the Fido Alliance.

The main obstacle to the wider uptake of U2F is the fact that it remains a mystery to most consumers, and even services like Gmail and Facebook – which come under regular, sustained attack – do not make a special effort to highlight the option.

However, as the cyber war intensifie­s, U2F is expected to move to the front and centre of such sites’ efforts to protect their users.

“Two-factor authentica­tion is rapidly becoming the norm, and is a proven way to secure accounts,” says Daka. “Through SOLID webKey, we hope to make it easier to use and therefore more popular with South Africans who want the best in online security.”

For more informatio­n, visit http://www. solidkeys. co.za.

Two-factor authentica­tion is becoming the norm.

 ?? Pictures: iStock ?? VITAL. Keeping your access details/password under lock and key.
Pictures: iStock VITAL. Keeping your access details/password under lock and key.
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 ??  ?? CRIME. Stealing ID online is an internet or cyber crime, but it happens all the time.
CRIME. Stealing ID online is an internet or cyber crime, but it happens all the time.
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