Asking about your mother"s home town is
supposed to help legitimate sites protect your online accounts--but
experts say hackers know more about you than you might think.
What did your maternal grandfather do for a living? What was your high school mascot"s name? Your first pet"s name? If you have an online account at a retailer like Amazon.com,
you"ve probably run into such questions when opening an account or when
trying to recover one of the dozens of passwords you juggle in your
head. Online businesses everywhere have embraced the technique, which
is called knowledge-based authentication. Theoretically, the
answers to these questions are so personal and obscure that knowing
them proves you are you. Experts say, however, that the technology
could end up helping hackers compromise your online accounts more
easily. Knowledge-based authentication doesn"t replace user
names and passwords; it"s an extra layer of security on top of such
schemes, since hackers who stumble across your log-in credentials won"t
easily figure out the name of your high-school sweetheart. Collecting
log-in information and answers to secret questions from your computer
requires keylogging software, making it harder for malicious hackers to
triumph. Phishers Get Close to Home Jon Fisher, whose firm, Bharosa (acquired by Oracle
last year), develops questions for companies to use, says
knowledge-based authentication adds a step for account access.
"Phishing both those pieces of information is fairly sophisticated." But
scammers have adapted, adding secret questions to their decoy pages,
says Lance James, CTO of fraud research company Secure Science. Bank
phishing sites may include their own fraudulent drop-down lists that
capture people"s answers, which bad guys can then use to hack real
accounts. Even when hackers don"t resort to subterfuge, these
nuggets of information can be easier targets than passwords. Mark
Burnett, author of Hacking the Code, has observed that
seemingly random questions such as "What was the make of your first
car?" have a narrow list of answers--in the case of autos, 38 major
makers--that hackers can use to try to break into an account, versus a
vast multitude of password combinations.
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