Naturally Rehearsing Passwords
Jeremiah Blocki, Manuel Blum, Anupam Datta

TL;DR
This paper develops models for usability and security in password management, demonstrating how password reuse can enhance rehearsal and proposing a new scheme using shared cues and the Chinese Remainder Theorem for improved security and usability.
Contribution
It introduces quantitative models for usability and security in password schemes and proposes Shared Cues, a novel method leveraging secret sharing and the Chinese Remainder Theorem.
Findings
Password reuse increases natural rehearsal rates.
Shared Cues scheme balances security and usability.
Empirical validation supports usability assumptions.
Abstract
We introduce quantitative usability and security models to guide the design of password management schemes --- systematic strategies to help users create and remember multiple passwords. In the same way that security proofs in cryptography are based on complexity-theoretic assumptions (e.g., hardness of factoring and discrete logarithm), we quantify usability by introducing usability assumptions. In particular, password management relies on assumptions about human memory, e.g., that a user who follows a particular rehearsal schedule will successfully maintain the corresponding memory. These assumptions are informed by research in cognitive science and validated through empirical studies. Given rehearsal requirements and a user's visitation schedule for each account, we use the total number of extra rehearsals that the user would have to do to remember all of his passwords as a measure…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUser Authentication and Security Systems · Advanced Malware Detection Techniques · Biometric Identification and Security
