Birthday, Name and Bifacial-security: Understanding Passwords of Chinese Web Users

2019 
Much attention has been paid to passwords chosen by English speaking users, yet only a few studies have examined how -English speaking users select passwords. In this paper, we perform of 73.1 million real-world Chinese web passwords in comparison with 33.2 million English counterparts. We highlight a number of interesting structural and semantic characteristics in Chinese passwords. We further evaluate the security of these passwords by employing two state-of-the-art cracking techniques. In particular, our cracking results reveal the nature of Chinese passwords. They are weaker against online guessing attacks (i.e., when the allowed guess number is small, 1∼10) than English passwords. But out of the remaining Chinese passwords, they are stronger against offline guessing attacks (i.e., when the guess number is large, >10) than their English counterparts. This reconciles two conflicting claims about the strength of Chinese passwords made by Bonneau (IEEE S&P'12) and Li et al. (Usenix Security'14 and IEEE TIFS'16). At 10 guesses, the success rate of our improved PCFG-based attack against the Chinese datasets is 33.2%~49.8%, indicating that our attack can crack 92% to 188% passwords than the state of the art. We also discuss the implications of our findings for password policies, strength meters and cracking.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    0
    References
    0
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []