I am sure some of you have written C# classes which have to set/get passwords from/to a database.
I would assume the sensitive details wouldn't be in plaintext. What are the recommended procedures for dealing with this sort of data? Is the text encrypted once retrieved? Do you store pws in an .xml file which is encrypted?
Thanks
NEVER store passwords in plain text, or at all. You should instead be storing a hashed version of the (password and salt), using a cryptographic hash function, like SHA-2.
So 'storing the passwords in an xml file which is encrypted' isn't the right direction - that implies you will be decrypting the file at some point, and therefore have access to all your users passwords (and thus, an attacker would have access to all your users passwords if your system were compromised) By storing hashes, you won't be able to get to your user's passwords, even if you wanted to.
So, when a person logs in, you would confirm that the password is correct by hashing the password that the person typed in, and compare it to the hash which you have stored - if the hashes match, the the password is correct.
Always use a randomly generated salt to make it infeasible for attackers to use rainbow tables to crack passwords, in the event your stored list of password hashes is compromised.
Depending on the nature of your application, you should be enforcing password complexity rules of some sort.
The usual way is to store a salted hash of the password in a database.
Related
i seemed Confused what i need to do.it a normal login scenario.i storing hashed value of password in database.[Please dont consider What Hashing Function i Using ].At The Login Time
user inputs his plain Text Password.Now what i needed to Do is hash this password ,pass it web service Then My DataBase Need to Compare Two Hashed Values.Now what i dont know is.
When i hash the Password at login time with salt.Is it still the same value i get or Something else
Can My dataBase(Sql server 2008) Able to Compare Two Hashed Values if Not then what i need to do.There is no need of Get the Password From Database.
Passing Hashed Password over Web services needs Extra Consideration of Security?
i need to Handle Password Recovery also.and can i use encryption/decryption algorithms here.
Please Suggest What i need to Do .
To increase security, it would be better to use a random salt.
The way i use to protect password while storing in the SQL server is that:
Create salt from the password, then generate hash with concatenation
of user name and password..
It will make the salt dependent on password and user name. If you are recovering your password then if credentials are correct then you are able to reset the password.
can i use encryption/decryption algorithms
??
As per your encryption method, Create your own algorithm to encrypt and decrypt the password with salt using the .net encryption libraries.
You have to save salt to database too.
in Authentication, Get salt, hashed inputted password with salt, compare with the hased value in database. All of these can reside in C# code.
You can't get original password from hashed value. You can generate a random password and force customer to change password in next login.
So I think hashed value is safe to transfer online. For a site Adminstrator, even he has access to database, he still doesn't know the password of customer.
I am trying to create a secure password login screen in c#.Right now i have just created the login screen and I am able to read the username and password from the database.But which i have designed does not have an encrypted password. Can any one help me out how to write a query to generate encrypted password and store the encrypted password value in a separate field.Thanks in advance.
Consider hashing the password that you currently store. SQL can hash a password as follows:
DECLARE #HashThisPassword nvarchar(4000);
SELECT #HashThisPassword = CONVERT(nvarchar(4000),'dslfdkjLK85kldhnv$n000#knf');
SELECT HashBytes('SHA1', #HashThisPassword);
... But SQL shouldn't even need to do this. You should hash the password as soon as your C# application receives it, and then only ever pass the hashed password into SQL to be saved. When checking if the user has provided the correct password for login, compare the hashes.
Your best bet is one way encryption.
What happens in this scenario is the user selects/is given a password. When that password is stored in the database it passes thorugh this one way encryption before it is stored. (You'll be doing this in your c# code)
Then when the user logs in, the entered password passes through this same one way encryption before it is compared with the password in the database.
This ensures that if a hacker gets into the database, it will be difficult to learn the password because they would have to determine the encryption type, and then devise a way to un-encrypt it which to my understanding is difficult at best, impossible at worst.
Here is a link to some code that may help. One Way Encryption
You don't want to do the encryption in sql itself, because if a hacker DOES access your database, they will be able to simply look at the procedure/function that you are using to do the encryption and they will have a much easier time.
And you don't want to store the password in the database unencrypted as well...
Your best bet is to write some code to read the password, encrypt it, and update the record, then all you have to do is continue to use the same encryption type and salt.
The c# cryptography library is very easy to use.
I am doing an AES encryption in my C# code, using a key which is generated using PasswordDerivedKey function by passing a password and a salt of 12 byte. I have implemented the logic in my application code and the "password" is the username of the logged in user and the salt is a static byte aray.
What is the best way of storing the password and the salt, as someone can easliy determine the salt (by reflecting my code) and the username of a person.
What are the alternatives I can adopt to store the password and the salt in a secure way. I dont think storing them in my application code is the best way of doing it.
Edit: By password, i meant the passkey used in the PBKDF function (to derive an encryption key) and its not the password provided by the user. I am using Windows Authentication
Why would you need to store password if it is merely an encrypted version of the windows username?
Anytime you need to encrypt/decrypt you know name of user thus can generate key dynamically.
Salt should never be considered a secure asset. No need to hide it. You should always assume attacker knows the salt. Salt is simply a mechanism to defeat rainbow tables and other fast lookups.
Is there something I am not seeing?
On Edit
The issue is misstated in the question. The issue isn't what/how should be stored. That answer is simple. Never store any of the cryptographic data (except salt).
The current implementation creates an encryption key from the username of logged in user. The problem is that is insecure as determining username is rather easy. To get around this one would need to either:
a) accept the implementation is insecure to someone willing to decompile app.
b) ... not a good idea ... hash can change based on groups/roles
c) use a unique secret password for each user.
c is the only secure implementation however it requires prompting the user for a passphrase when encrypting or decrypting.
Against whom must be the data be secure? If the currently logged in user is allowed access to the data, but other Windows Authentication users are not allowed access, what you really want is for the data to be encrypted for the particular logged in user. If you have access rights to configure the PC, you might be able to create an Encrypted folder with permissions only for the desired user. This is not 100% secure (you can still intercept the data at various places if you have root access), but your only other reasonable alternative is to add another password.
Alternately, you can simply accept that the protection is weak and provide minimal obfuscation. It depends on the value of the data and the capabilities of your possible attackers. If your attackers have sufficient privileges to Reflect over your assembly on the actual machine, then it's highly likely that they're also Administrator, which means you're pretty much screwed no matter what you do. There are tools that can connect to a running process and monitor its memory, which means they could simply wait until you've decrypted the data and read it from memory.
Best way to keep the salt is to generate it on runtime and keep it per session along with other user stuff such as username and password:
use signs in and provide username/password
hash with stored salt and check against password hash
create new salt and store it along with the hash
Symmetric encryption (or even asymmetric) is not at all recommended for passwords. You not to hash it which is just one-way.
I added this as an second answer because it is a different solution. I just thought of it tonight because I am working with this class (trying to reverse engineer kindle encryption).
You may want to look into the Protected Data Class
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/2c64xe0y(v=VS.90).aspx
This is a class that allows you to store data in the windows cryptographic store.
By using the Protect and Unprotect function you can pass data into and pull data from the cryptographic store.
If you didn't want to force the user to create (and remember) an encryption key you could.
1) Check to see if current user has encryption key in the store.
1a) If not then create a random encryption key
2) Use key to encrypt file and store
3) To decrypt retrieve key from store.
4) Another user may be able to access the file but will be unable to get a copy of the key from the store.
A couple caveats. Only the windows user who stored the key can retreive the key. However this can be bypassed depending on environment. If the user has no windows password (or weak windows password) anyone w/ access to machine can run as the user and windows will gladly hand over the key. In a domain environment anyone (admin) who can impersonate the user and modify password can access they key. If user's windows profile is trashed so is the only copy of your encryption key.
in my current C# windows application password has been stored in plain text which is obviously not good. so i just want to know what is the best way to encrypt the password and stored into SQL Server. I have read that using hash+salt is better. but i feel "EncryptByPassPhrase","DecryptByPassPhrase" new feature in sql 2005 is better to use because you are handling everything from SQL Server itself and i suppose it uses triple DES. can somebody suggest is it good to use it ?
Do you need to have access to the original password, or are you just going to try and compare an entered password against one in the database?
If you need access to the original password, then you are going to have to use an encryption algorithm instead of a hash algorithm.
If all you're doing is storing a password in the database so that you can check it later against a known input value, then a hash with a salt will work.
Remember that when the client is sending the credentials across to be validated, that you don't want to be sending the password in clear text!
A hash & salt is the way to go, because its impossible to retrieve the original password from it. If you encrypt then decrypt the password, the plaintext password is retrievable so its not the best.
I agree it makes sense to have the encryption all in 1 place. However if you separate the key from the data (key in the c# code, data in the db), that will increase security. Also, Sql Server uses a master key when encrypting, which means if you need to restore the data to a new server, you will have trouble restoring the data.
This all comes down to key management and how you want to do this.
As with most questions the best answer depends on the context of your situation. There is no good solution.
Some options:
Leave the password in plain text or reversably encrypt. Use SQLServer facilities to encrypt important fields at the RDBMS level or use similiar encryption functions and hope that MS has implemented reasonable key management and the keys are reasonably secure for your purposes. In practice all encryption does is collapse storage of a whole lot of little secrets into storage of one big secret.. It might make the problem more managable but the problem itself never goes away.
Irreversably "Encrypt" the password using a hashing algorithm or some form of crypt(). Depending on the attack vectors available this method may not provide much in the way of actual improvment of security over plaintext storage.
. Use of hashed passwords limits your options in terms of selection of a secure authentication algorithm. With this approach you will likely end up sending plain texts or other material that is no better over a transport (regardless of if unbound encryption is used or not) this can be a substantial risk from a trust POV.
. Succeptable to offline dictionary attack if hashes are stolen recovery of some portion of passwords should be outright assumed if they have any value to an attacker.
. In some cases knowledge of the password hash can be just as bad as knowing the password in terms of system access.
If you are certain that you will never use a hashed scheme to authenticate (like HTTP Digest Auth), hashed password is more secure. To avoid rainbow table attack, please use a nonce (or salt). I would use HMAC-SHA1 and use the nonce as the key. They key must be stored with the password.
Otherwise, you will have to store encrypted password because hashed password can't work with authentication involving hashes. For encryption, I have following suggestions,
Don't store the key in DB, don't hardcode it either. Store it some other secure place, like using DPAPI on Windows.
Make sure you have a key version so you can rotate the key to comply with certain standards.
I am not familiar with the encryption in SQLServer. Make sure it has a random Initial Vector. You can check this by encrypting same password twice, it should yield different ciphertext. If no random IV, don't use it, just encrypt it in your application.
I'm in a bit of a strange dilema. Please bear with me as I try to explain it!
I'm using forms authentication and am storing additional user information in another table (referenced UserID from Forms Auth, encrypted SSN, Salt value). When users register to the site, I ask SSN, DOB and LName and verify against our system before they create an account. I want to determine if that SSN has an account associated with it in forms authentication. Since the SSN is encrypted with a salt value, I can't do a lookup without looking at each row.
I only want 1 user account per SSN. Using a salt value disrupts this.
The way I see it, the only way around this is to use a common encryption algorithm for the SSN. When the user types it in, I apply the same encrypt algorythm and see if there is a value match in the user extended properties table.
Is this secure enough?
Rather than use the same salt value, generate the salt based on the other user information so that it can be reconstructed. Thus, you can regenerate the salt once the user applies, and you can generate the expected hash and get the job done in a single query.
If you wish to encrypt (not hash) the SSN value, it is not a good practice to store the key in the same table as Natso has pointed out. This is fraught with danger, since keys are not to be stored with the data they protect - if an attacker manages to obtain a dump of your database, he would be able to decrypt the encrypted contents, since the key is stored along-side.
The application should obtain the key from a secure key store which could then be used to encrypt/decrypt the information. This way, you could continue to store sensitive information in the database thereby protecting your information, and apply a different mechanism (usually file-system security) to protect your key store.
This is of course, assuming that your requirement is to store data in a secure manner in the database, and recover the same at a later point time. However, if you do not the data to be recoverable once it has passed through an algorithm, you should explore the use of hashes.
Use the same salt every time. Then you can compare the encrypted values.