Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!husc6!think!ames!umd5!brl-adm!adm!PAAAAAR%CALSTATE.BITNET@cunyvm.cuny.edu From: PAAAAAR%CALSTATE.BITNET@cunyvm.cuny.edu Newsgroups: comp.unix.questions Subject: RE: Re: Password Choices Message-ID: <16612@brl-adm.ARPA> Date: 23 Jul 88 03:07:11 GMT Sender: news@brl-adm.ARPA Lines: 38 >In article <16562@brl-adm.ARPA> JPLILER@simtel20.arpa (John R. Pliler) writes: >Why not use a *random* password generator? > -Charlie cmiller@sunspot.UUCP replied >Because you can generate your own password that has meaning to *you* >and is easy for you to remember, but appears random. Random passwords are not particularly memorable or typable. A nice random password generator should therefore provide a memorable meaning as well. Kurzban wrote a paper in the ACM SIGSAC Review called "Easily Remembered PassPHRASES - a better Approach" (Vol 3, Numbers 2 & 4, Fall-Winter 1985). (SIGSAC is the Association for Computing Machinary's Special Interest Group on Security, Audit and Control which publishes a periodical "Review") In essence the password can be the initial letters of a sentence generated by picking words in the correct grammatical categories and with the correct initial letters. When the system generates the password it looks up word to make a random phrase like (using a dictinary) Interns Stew dimples ballooning masterful Office-boys. (only better!). Nobody has gone the whole hog of using the fact that humans find obscene phrases the most memorable ones:-) I have never heard of a working version of this scheme and have not had time to test it out. Dick Botting PAAAAAR@CCS.CSUSCC.CALSTATE(doc-dick) paaaaar@calstate.bitnet PAAAAAR%CALSTATE.BITNET@{depends on the phase of the moon}.EDU Dept Comp Sci., CSUSB, 5500 State Univ Pkway, San Bernardino CA 92407 Disclaimer: What with my brain, my fingers, this Mac, Red Ryder, the PDP and its software, NOS and the CSU CYBERS, plus transmission errors, your machine, terminal, eyes, and brain,..... I probably didn't think what you thought you just read any way!