PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Better passwords get with the beat

2011-05-18
(Press-News.org) No password is 100% secure. There are always ways and means for those with malicious intent to hack, crack or socially engineer access to a password. Indeed, there are more and more websites and databases compromised on a seemingly daily basis. A new approach to verifying passwords that also takes into account the speed with which a user types in their login and the gaps between characters would render a stolen password useless.

Writing in the International Journal of Internet Technology and Secured Transactions computer scientists from Beirut explain the shortcomings of previous attempts at key-pattern analysis. KPA is an attempt to scrutinize the speed with which a user taps the keys as well as measuring the gaps between keystrokes, the beat of their typing. KPA has also been tested with modified keyboards that measure the force with which keys are pressed. The result can be a biometric profile of the way an individual user types in their password. If the biometric does not match the user then the password fails even if it is "correct".

Ravel Jabbour, Wes Masri and Ali El-Hajj of the American University of Beirut, in Lebanon, point out how inconvenient a modified keyboard would be to an organization or individual. They explain how previous attempts at KPA fail if the pressing of two keys overlaps. Early efforts also focus on "inter" timing, the time lag between pressing one key and the next, which is not adequate to ensure a password is usable only by the legitimate user. The team instead has incorporated "intra" timing that measures how long each key remains depressed, which they say gives them the beat of the typing and is a much more robust parameter.

The program gathers information about how the user is typing in their password by recording the electronic signals from a standard keyboard as keys are pressed and released. The program then compares the pattern of the password typed with a pre-stored pattern recorded when the account is initially setup. A user would be expected to repeatedly type their password at the login registration stage to record a reproducible typing pattern. The validation algorithm then looks at the various parameters, intra and inter timing the relationships between two keys (digraph), three keys (trigraph) and up to the number of keys that are the password length.

Obviously, a longer password will provide a more complicated profile of the person's typing and so reduce the risk of the typing of anyone else typing the password with the same timing pattern as the legitimate user. There is a trade-off, of course, too long a password and even a legitimate user is unlikely to reproduced their typing pattern accurately every time they enter the password. Password distribution can also be accommodated for by creating KPA groups for the same password for those users eager to share their passwords with friends and colleagues without impinging on the security of the system, the team says.

INFORMATION:

"Optimising password security through key-pattern analysis" in Int. J. Internet Technology and Secured Transactions, 2011, 3, 178-193

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Researchers develop hardware encryption for new computer memory technology

2011-05-18
Security concerns are one of the key obstacles to the adoption of new non-volatile main memory (NVMM) technology in next-generation computers, which would improve computer start times and boost memory capacity. But now researchers from North Carolina State University have developed new encryption hardware for use with NVMM to protect personal information and other data. NVMM technologies, such as phase-change memory, hold great promise to replace conventional dynamic random access memory (DRAM) in the main memory of computers. NVMM would allow computers to start instantly, ...

Abortions generate $95 million a year for Polish doctors as women use illegal private sector

2011-05-18
Amsterdam, 17 May, 2011 - New analysis published by the UK journal Reproductive Health Matters shows that the criminalisation of abortion in Poland has led to the development of a vast illegal private sector with no controls on price, quality of care or accountability. Since abortion became illegal in the late 1980s the number of abortions carried out in hospitals has fallen by 99%. The private trade in abortions is, however, flourishing, with abortion providers advertising openly in newspapers. Women have been the biggest losers during this push of abortion provision ...

EMAS publishes position statement about the post-reproductive health of women

2011-05-18
Amsterdam, 17 May 2011 - Elsevier announced the publication of an important position statement from the European Menopause and Andropause Society (EMAS) in the journal Maturitas (http://www.maturitas.org/) on managing menopausal women with a personal or family history of venous thromboembolism (VTE). The statement includes summary recommendations as a quick aid for the busy clinician. "The expanding ageing female population means that clinicians increasingly have to deal with post-reproductive health problems," said Professor Serge Rozenberg, President of EMAS. "EMAS ...

New York Chess & Games: First and Second Graders Impress With Their Chess At Nationals!

New York Chess & Games: First and Second Graders Impress With Their Chess At Nationals!
2011-05-18
Brooklyn chess coach Christian Whitted and his first and second graders from Pioneer Academy (P.S. 307 in Corona Queens) come surprisingly close to winning at their first national chess tournament. It looked like a good chance for a "Cinderella" ending up until the final round but there was just one team better in the K - 3rd grade unrated section this year at the United States Chess Federation's Elementary School national chess tournament. The brand new chess team from Pioneer Academy in Corona Queens NY had to settle for 2nd place as another team from New ...

A virus similar to herpes could be a risk factor for multiple sclerosis

2011-05-18
The Epstein-Barr (EVB) virus –belonging to the herpesviruses family, which also includes the herpes simplex virus and the cytomegalovirus– is one of the environmental factors that might cause multiple sclerosis, a condition affecting the central nervous system, which causes are unknown. This has been confirmed by University of Granada scientists that analyzed the presence of this virus in patients with multiple sclerosis. Researchers analyzed antibody levels, that is, antibodies that are produced within the central nervous system and that could be directly involved in the ...

Clubbers can smell a good nightspot

2011-05-18
Since the smoking ban in restaurants, bars and nightclubs, customers are more aware of unpleasant smells, such as body odors and the smell of old beer, that used to be masked by cigarette smoke. Now science is looking at how the introduction of pleasant ambient scents that hide unwanted odors might enhance the nightlife experience. According to Dr. Hendrik Schifferstein from Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands, and his colleagues, carefully selected fragrances can enhance dancing activity, improve the overall perception of the evening, and improve how nightclub ...

No pain, big gain

2011-05-18
It likely comes as no surprise that low back pain is the most common form of chronic pain among adults. Lesser known is the fact that those withchronic pain also experience cognitive impairments and reduced gray matter in parts of the brain associated with pain processing and the emotional components of pain, like depression and anxiety. In a longitudinal study published this week in the Journal of Neuroscience, a group of pain researchers from McGill University and the McGill University Health Centre (MUHC) posed a fundamental question: If you can alleviate chronic ...

That anxiety may be in your gut, not in your head

2011-05-18
Hamilton, ON (May 17, 2011) - For the first time, researchers at McMaster University have conclusive evidence that bacteria residing in the gut influence brain chemistry and behaviour. The findings are important because several common types of gastrointestinal disease, including irritable bowel syndrome, are frequently associated with anxiety or depression. In addition there has been speculation that some psychiatric disorders, such as late onset autism, may be associated with an abnormal bacterial content in the gut. "The exciting results provide stimulus for further ...

Mitigating mummy berry disease of blueberry

2011-05-18
Blueberries may be nutritional powerhouses, but some types are no match for the fungus Monilinia vaccinii-corymbosi, which causes "mummy berry" disease. Fortunately, U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) scientists have more than 100 years of experience in blueberry breeding and cultivation. Geneticist Mark Ehlenfeldt and plant pathologist James Polashock embody the latest generation. They work for USDA's Agricultural Research Service (ARS). With ARS colleagues, they have conducted comprehensive studies examining the responses of today's blueberry cultivars to infection ...

CHEO Research Institute develops secure protocol for data disclosure

2011-05-18
OTTAWA, May 17, 2011 - It is important for health care providers to report health issues, such as influenza outbreaks, to public health authorities. But there is evidence of a reluctance to share patient data for public health purposes due to concerns for both patient privacy and provider confidentiality. Dr. Khaled El-Emam and his research team at the CHEO Research Institute have developed a secure protocol and system that would solve this problem. The new system would protect the identity of patients and health care providers while providing effective disease surveillance ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Ice streams move due to tiny ice quakes

Whale song has remarkable similarities to human speech in terms of efficiency

Uncovered: How mice override instinctive fear responses

A pathway that contributes to insulin resistance can be targeted, mouse study shows

Special Issue: The cryosphere

Scientists discover brain mechanism that helps overcome fear

Mantis shrimp clubs filter sound to mitigate damage

Large differences in water-seeking ability found in U.S. corn varieties

Whale song has structure similar to human language

Cracking the Burmese python code: New data zeroes in on game-changing strategies

Risk it or kick it? Study analyzes NFL coaches’ risk tolerance on fourth down

UC3M patents a new design for a soft robotic joint that is more adaptable and robust

Nutrition labels meant to promote healthy eating could discourage purchases

A new way to detect inflammation

Crohn's & Colitis Congress® spotlights key IBD research findings

Vanilla farmers search for a crop and conservation sweet spot

Global “sisterhood” seeks to understand what makes a healthy vaginal microbiome

Announcing the winners of the 5th annual Rising Black Scientists Awards

Food: Cracking the method for the ‘perfect’ boiled egg

Cannabis use disorder emergency department visits and hospitalizations and 5-year mortality

COVID-19 pandemic and rates of common ophthalmic procedures among Medicare beneficiaries

Updated drug information handout outdoes FDA’s version

Gemini North teams up with LOFAR to reveal largest radio jet ever seen in the early universe

Researchers discover a major driver of inflammatory pathology in autoimmune and chronic inflammatory diseases

Research in fruit flies pinpoints brain pathways involved in alcohol-induced insomnia

Cancer diagnoses and deaths are declining in Appalachia but remain significantly higher compared to other US regions

Why some heavy drinkers develop advanced liver disease, while others do not

OmicsFootPrint: Mayo Clinic’s AI tool offers a new way to visualize disease

New genetic mutation linked to drug resistance in non-small cell lung cancer patient

Single-photon LiDAR delivers detailed 3D images at distances up to 1 kilometer

[Press-News.org] Better passwords get with the beat