23 captures
10 Jul 2009 - 29 Jun 2025
Jun JUL Aug
03
2013 2014 2015
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About this capture

COLLECTED BY

Organization: IT History Society

Archive-It Partner 416 IT History Society

Collection: IT Historical Resource Sites

The IT History Society (ITHS) is a world-wide group of over 500 members working together to assist in and promote the documentation, preservation, cataloging, and researching of Information Technology (IT) history. We offer a place where individuals, academicians, corporate archivists, curators of public institutions, and hobbyists alike can gather and share information and resources. This catalog of resource sites concerning IT history is the only one of its kind and is a valuable resource for IT historians and archivists alike.
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The Wayback Machine - http://web.archive.org/web/20140703120312/http://www.out-law.com/page-10152
 



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  • Security guru says he was 'probably wrong' to attack masked passwords

    Security expert Bruce Schneier has said that he probably made a mistake when he backed a usability expert's plea to website operators to stop masking passwords as users type because it does not improve security and makes sites harder to use.07 Jul 2009

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  • Usability guru Jakob Nielsen said last month that sites should show most passwords in clear text as users type them. Nielsen is the web's most famous usability expert. OUT-LAW put his observations to Schneier, a widely-respected expert on IT security. He backed Nielsen's view.

    "Password masking has annoyed me for years," Schneier told OUT-LAW.COM at the time. "Shoulder surfing is largely a phantom problem, and people know to be alert when others are nearby, but mistyping a long password happens all the time."

    Schneier shared his observation on his blog. Over 160 comments were posted in response, mostly arguing that he and Nielsen had made a mistake. Schneier has now admitted that he probably made a mistake.

    "I was certainly too glib," he wrote on Friday. "Like any security countermeasure, password masking has value. But like any countermeasure, password masking is not a panacea."

    He repeated his argument that the risks of shoulder surfing are overrated; but he added: "This is not to say that shoulder surfing isn’t a threat. It is. And, as many readers pointed out, password masking is one of the reasons it isn't more of a threat."

    Schneier now backs an approach taken by BlackBerry devices and iPhones, which display each character briefly before masking it. "That seems like an excellent compromise," he said.

    "So was I wrong?" wrote Schneier. "Maybe. Okay, probably."

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