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Re(3): Plaintext passwords?

by FoxtrotUniform (Prior)
on Mar 25, 2002 at 21:18 UTC ( [id://154225]=note: print w/replies, xml ) Need Help??


in reply to Re: (FoxUni) Re: Plaintext passwords?
in thread We blame tye.

How about this:

  • Store the hashed password on the server.
  • Hash the password on the client (using Javascript PasswdMD5 or something), then cat on a sufficiently random session ID and hash it again. Send that hash to the server.
  • The server takes the session ID, cats it onto its copy of the hashed password, hashes the result, and compares that hash to the one it got from the client.

So the server isn't keeping around any plaintext passwords, and the session ID acts as a one-time key to prevent replay attacks. For extra tasty goodness, you can do this through SSL to prevent attackers from sniffing the session ID, although unless they know the original password hash (which, since we're not storing the password in plaintext anywhere, is mildly unlikely) the worst damage they could do with a sniffed session ID is chuck a bogus hash back at the server and give the real user a "sorry, try again" message (if that).

I'm a bit leery of this system, because it seems too simple. Can you see any problems with it?

Update: Cacharbe expressed some doubts about the "sufficiently random" session ID. Basically, the idea is that the server picks a random integer (from /dev/random or something similar), keeps a copy, and sends it off to the client. Client hashes their password, cats the session ID onto the password, hashes _that_, and sends it back over the wire. Server cats the (same) session ID onto its hashed password for whoever the client claims to be, hashes it, and checks it against the hash it got back from the client.

The problem with this (which I only just saw -- augh!) is that the server's still storing information that can be used verbatim to attack a client account. If I can get the hashed password from the server, then I can just connect, get a session ID, and go from there. In short, it isn't really a step up from storing passwords in plaintext on the server. Oh well, back to the drawing board.

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