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Fast, Lean, and Accurate: Modeling Password Guessability Using Neural Networks

LISA: Where systems engineering and operations professionals share real-world knowledge about designing, building, and maintaining the critical systems of our interconnected world.

The LISA conference has long served as the annual vendor-neutral meeting place for the wider system administration community. The LISA14 program recognized the overlap and differences between traditional and modern IT operations and engineering, and developed a highly-curated program around 5 key topics: Systems Engineering, Security, Culture, DevOps, and Monitoring/Metrics. The program included 22 half- and full-day training sessions; 10 workshops; and a conference program consisting of 50 invited talks, panels, refereed paper presentations, and mini-tutorials.

Authors: 

William Melicher, Blase Ur, Sean M. Segreti, Saranga Komanduri, Lujo Bauer, Nicolas Christin, and Lorrie Faith Cranor, Carnegie Mellon University

Awarded Best Paper

Abstract: 

Human-chosen text passwords, today’s dominant form of authentication, are vulnerable to guessing attacks. Unfortunately, existing approaches for evaluating password strength by modeling adversarial password guessing are either inaccurate or orders of magnitude too large and too slow for real-time, client-side password checking. We propose using artificial neural networks to model text passwords’ resistance to guessing attacks and explore how different architectures and training methods impact neural networks’ guessing effectiveness. We show that neural networks can often guess passwords more effectively than state-of-the-art approaches, such as probabilistic context-free grammars and Markov models. We also show that our neural networks can be highly compressed—to as little as hundreds of kilobytes— without substantially worsening guessing effectiveness. Building on these results, we implement in JavaScript the first principled client-side model of password guessing, which analyzes a password’s resistance to a guessing attack of arbitrary duration with sub-second latency. Together, our contributions enable more accurate and practical password checking than was previously possible.

William Melicher, Carnegie Mellon University

Blase Ur, Carnegie Mellon University

Sean M. Segreti, Carnegie Mellon University

Saranga Komanduri, Carnegie Mellon University

Lujo Bauer, Carnegie Mellon University

Nicolas Christin, Carnegie Mellon University

Lorrie Faith Cranor, Carnegie Mellon University

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BibTeX
@inproceedings {197243,
author = {William Melicher and Blase Ur and Sean M. Segreti and Saranga Komanduri and Lujo Bauer and Nicolas Christin and Lorrie Faith Cranor},
title = {Fast, Lean, and Accurate: Modeling Password Guessability Using Neural Networks},
booktitle = {25th USENIX Security Symposium (USENIX Security 16)},
year = {2016},
isbn = {978-1-931971-32-4},
address = {Austin, TX},
pages = {175--191},
url = {https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity16/technical-sessions/presentation/melicher},
publisher = {USENIX Association},
month = aug
}
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