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A Future-Adaptable Password Scheme

Date: 
6/10/1999
Authors: 
Niels Provos::University of Michigan
David Mazières::OpenBSD Developer
Paper/Abstract HTML: 
http://usenix.org/publications/library/proceedings/usenix99/provos/provos_html/i...
Paper: 
http://usenix.org/publications/library/proceedings/usenix99/provos/provos.pdf

Many authentication schemes depend on secret passwords. Unfortunately, the length and randomness of user-chosen passwords remain fixed over time. In contrast, hardware improvements constantly give attackers increasing computational power. As a result, password schemes such as the traditional UNIX user-authentication system are failing with time.

This paper discusses ways of building systems in which password security keeps up with hardware speeds. We formalize the properties desirable in a good password system, and show that the computational cost of any secure password scheme must increase as hardware improves. We present two algorithms with adaptable cost--eksblowfish, a block cipher with a purposefully expensive key schedule, and bcrypt, a related hash function. Failing a major breakthrough in complexity theory, these algorithms should allow password-based systems to adapt to hardware improvements and remain secure well into the future.

Groups audience: 
USENIX ATC '99

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