IMO…
- must not contain a dictionary word ---- Silly, and counterproductive for long
passphrases
- must not contain repetitive or sequential characters --- Okay, not “aaaa” or
“abcde” but not “call” or “innocence”? Silly.
- must not be derived from publicly searchable internet or social media
information (favorite sports team, names of friends or family, schools,
restaurants, etc.) -- Who plans to regulate that?
That's at the other extreme of shortsighted.
Regards,




ASB
http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBaker

Providing Expert Technology Consulting Services for the SMB market…

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On Wed, Apr 27, 2016 8:08 PM, Sean Martin seanmarti...@gmail.com wrote:
Great timing for this thread.
A recently updated password policy has sparked some debate at %dayjob%. It
contains some of the expected requirements:
- unique per account - varying length requirements based on account type 
(domain user,
administrative user, etc.) - don't include userID or personal information 
(birthday, phone number, SS#,
etc.) - standard complexity requirements (uppercase/lowercase/numerical/special)
...then some additional requirements, which are raising some eyebrows:
- must not contain a dictionary word - must not contain repetitive or 
sequential characters - must not be derived from publicly searchable internet 
or social media
information (favorite sports team, names of friends or family, schools,
restaurants, etc.)
While I understand the intent, my opinion is that no typical end-user is going
to truly understand what these requirements mean, or will simply find them too
difficult to comply with. Our current expiration policy is 90 days. I believe
the end users would rather deal with more frequent password changes than have to
adhere to the above stated policy.
Interested in other opinions....
- Sean
On Wed, Apr 27, 2016 at 3:33 PM, Micheal Espinola Jr < 
michealespin...@gmail.com > wrote:
Thanks. 100% true story + federal investigation. State lines were crossed, and
millions of dollars were at stake.
--
Espi

On Wed, Apr 27, 2016 at 2:39 PM, Dave Lum < l...@ochin.org > wrote:
That’s a perfect example Michael.



Or, let’s say I am in IT at Target, maybe later I move into IT at an HVAC
company that has VPN access to Target (IT guys working at companies that do
business with their former employers? Never happens right?). Maybe my PC at the
HVAC place get compromised and since Target never disabled my account and I use
the same password at %newjob% as I did %oldjob%, a simple hop over VPN now
leverages the access I had at Target…



Except what actually happened with Target was more * harder * than what I 
described above.



IMO any place that doesn’t require a password expiration of any kind is likely
(exceptions to this, sure) the same place that doesn’t have a process for
disabling all the access former employees have.



Dave



From: listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com [mailto: listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com ] 
On Behalf Of Micheal Espinola Jr
Sent: Tuesday, April 26, 2016 6:31 PM
To: ntsys...@lists.myitforum.com
Subject: Re: [NTSysADM] RE: Password expiring debate on patch management



 1. Old admin knows many management passwords
 2. Old admin goes to work for competitor
 3. Company and competitor are up for same contracts
 4. Old admin remotes into company to look at emails and presentation materials
 5. Competitor starts taking business from company by usurping sales pitches in
    very specific ways
 6. I get hired 2+ years after old admin in question
 7. I review remote logs to establish behavioral patterns
 8. I see odd logon behavior and trace repetitive IPs
 9. I trace IPs to competitor as well as old admin specifically



I am Jacks complete lack of surprise when management doesnt change their
password and uses the same passwords for many things.








--
Espi





On Mon, Apr 25, 2016 at 4:27 PM, Kennedy, Jim < kennedy...@elyriaschools.org > 
wrote:



" Even six months is far better than never"



Why?




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

From: listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com [ listsadmin@lists.myitforum.com ] on 
behalf of Dave Lum [ l...@ochin.org ]
Sent: Monday, April 25, 2016 6:58 PM
To: ntsys...@lists.myitforum.com
Subject: [NTSysADM] Password expiring debate on patch management

Anyone see the debate on the Patch management list, driven by this: 
https://www.cesg.gov.uk/articles/problems-forcing-regular-password-expiry



I don’t even know how it’s a debate other than the desired frequency (no
one-size-fits-all on that IMO). Even six months is far better than never. With
expiring passwords you at bare minimum mitigate employee’s that leave.



David Lum

Systems Administrator III
P: 503.943.2500
E: l...@ochin.org
A: 1881 SW Naito Parkway, Portland, OR 97201


www.ochin.org












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