Publication | Closed Access
It's No Secret. Measuring the Security and Reliability of Authentication via “Secret” Questions
139
Citations
9
References
2009
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringUsable SecurityInformation SecurityInformation LeakageInformation ForensicsWebmail ProvidersMulti-factor AuthenticationCommunicationComputational Social SciencePopular Webmail ProvidersStatisticsInternet SecurityBehavioral SciencesIdentity-based SecurityData PrivacyAccount PasswordsComputer SciencePrivacy ConcernData SecurityCryptographySocial ComputingSecurityPhishingSurvey Methodology
All four of the most popular webmail providers - AOL, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo! - rely on personal questions as the secondary authentication secrets used to reset account passwords. The security of these questions has received limited formal scrutiny, almost all of which predates webmail. We ran a user study to measure the reliability and security of the questions used by all four webmail providers. We asked participants to answer these questions and then asked their acquaintances to guess their answers. Acquaintances with whom participants reported being unwilling to share their webmail passwords were able to guess 17% of their answers. Participants forgot 20% of their own answers within six months. What's more, 13% of answers could be guessed within five attempts by guessing the most popular answers of other participants, though this weakness is partially attributable to the geographic homogeneity of our participant pool.
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