Yet many businesses and nearly all consumers still rely on passwords as the primary means of verifying who they say they are.
At last week's RSA security conference, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates sounded once again his well-worn call for an end to passwords, while on the show floor, companies touted gadgets to help verify identity.
There's plenty of technology that could augment or replace the password, from smart cards to password-generating tokens to mobile phone-based systems. They have yet to catch on. One hurdle is that it can be inconvenient to have to keep a piece of hardware handy. But the real problem, analysts said, is that neither businesses nor consumers appear ready to pay for them.
"Every bank I talk to doesn't want to hand out tokens," Gartner analyst Avivah Litan said. "They're too expensive."
Passwords are seen by many experts as a weak link in the security chain. A well-circulated research paper from 1979 noted that a significant share of passwords could be easily guessed in less than 5 minutes -- and that was when punch cards were popular.
Web stores, online banks and other companies doing business on the Internet recommend that customers choose a password that is easy for them to remember but hard for someone else to guess. The reality is that the converse is usually true. Few of us can remember all of our passwords, and yet the bad guys, armed with sophisticated software, can crack most passwords in a matter of minutes.
RSA's SecurID token, which generates a one-time password (OTP) every few seconds, is only one of the hardware products on the market that aim to bolster security for consumers. Credit card-size smart cards slot into a reader and can be part of two-factor authentication. In this system, two ID elements -- the smart card and a personal identification number, for example -- are used to monitor access. A USB token works like a smart card, but plugs directly into a PC, instead of into a special reader. Another system sends one-time passwords via text message to a customer's registered mobile phone.
The biggest factor pushing companies to pay for something better than passwords are the concerns around identity theft and phishing -- Internet fraud in which people are fooled into giving their personal information, such as online banking passwords, to thieves. If something more than a password was needed to get access to financial records, it would be trickier for crooks to profit from such schemes.
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