[ARIN-consult] Consultation on Password Security for ARIN Online Accounts
Ken Mix
ken.mix at clearfly.net
Tue Feb 16 11:33:35 EST 2021
Hello,
I am in strong favor of option 3. A match in HIBP means that a user's account is ripe for a simple credential-stuffing attack. While it may be slightly less convenient having to reset a password immediately, I can't think of a practical reason to leave known compromised credentials active (even if a user has two-factor authentication enabled as a mitigation step).
In addition to requiring a password change, it may also be useful to include some canned verbiage explaining the dangers of password reuse and recommending the use of a password manager (vendor agnostic, of course -- it could even be something very brief with link to a reputable third party like the EFF for additional details, e.g. https://ssd.eff.org/en/module/creating-strong-passwords).
Regards,
Ken Mix
-----Original Message-----
From: ARIN-announce <arin-announce-bounces at arin.net> On Behalf Of ARIN
Sent: Tuesday, February 16, 2021 09:12
To: arin-announce at arin.net
Subject: [arin-announce] Consultation on Password Security for ARIN Online Accounts
Since October 2020, the ARIN Online system has been subject to a series of dictionary-based password guessing attacks. Because of the protective measures currently in place, some customer accounts were locked during these attacks. ARIN staff has been heavily engaged in mitigating these attacks, and we are seeking community feedback on potential steps ARIN can take to reduce the risk of future attacks and to help customers ensure they are using strong passwords. Password dictionary guessing attacks continue to be a problem in the industry, and this effort should help reduce the extent of previously exposed passwords for our ARIN Online user base.
Password Check Proposal
To help ARIN customers make sure they aren’t using a password that has been exposed and shared publicly online, when someone updates their password or creates a user account in ARIN Online, it is proposed that ARIN should check the database "haveibeenpwned (https://haveibeenpwned.com)" to see if they are trying to use a password that has been compromised. ARIN will not send the password, but rather we encrypt the password and send part of the encrypted password to the Have I been Pwned (HIBP) Service (https://haveibeenpwned.com/API/v3#PwnedPasswords) to see if it matches a compromised password. Actual passwords are never sent or used in any query, nor is your user ID or email shared as part of this check.
How would it work?
1. A user enters a password during Account Setup, Password Change, Password Reset or User Login in ARIN Online.
2. ARIN encrypts the password and sends part of the encrypted password to the Have I been Pwned (HIBP) Service (https://haveibeenpwned.com/API/v3#PwnedPasswords) and returns all possible matches in their database. (Your actual password is never sent or used in any query.)
3. We compare the full encrypted password to the results sent by HIBP to see if there is a match.
4. If there is a match we will notify the customer.
Optional Outcomes
We are interested in the community’s thoughts on the possible outcomes when we identify a password that has been exposed in a data breach according to the HIBP service. There are three options:
1. Issue a caution message but allow the password.
2. Issue a warning message and notify the customer that they need to change their password within a defined time period, but not at the current point of login.
3. Issue warning message that requires the customer to select and set a different password immediately.
The feedback you provide during this consultation will help inform how we move forward to increase security of ARIN Online for all customers. Thank you for your participation in the ARIN Consultation and Suggestion Process.
Please provide comments to arin-consult at arin.net. You can subscribe to this mailing list at:
http://lists.arin.net/mailman/listinfo/arin-consult
This consultation will remain open through 5:00 PM ET on 16 March 2021.
Regards,
John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN)
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