WWW User authentication

Brian C. Lane blane at aa.net
Thu Apr 11 15:36:17 PDT 1996


On Tue, 9 Apr 1996 16:12:17 -0600, you wrote:

>>   I just finished writing a cgi script to allow users to change their login
>> passwords via a webpage. I currently have the webpage being authenticated
>> with the basic option (uuencoded plaintext). MD5 would be nicer, but how
>> many browsers actually support it?
>
>A straight MD5 probably isn't supported by any of them, but then again
>MD5 is not necessarily going to help too much.  The sort of people
>that need a web page to change their password aren't likely to
>use overly complex passwords (mixed-case, scrambled-in numbers,
>et al.)  So if a snoop can get the MD5, her chances of getting a password
>aren't all that bad.

  Hey! I'm not a total dunce! <G> The cgi I wrote (ok, ok, hacked) includes
cracklib support. It won't let people enter simple passwords.

>Your best bet is to try to implement it via SSL, but as I understand
>it that limits you on your server options quite a bit.  Netscape and
>Apache have it, as I understand; I think that's about it actually.
>But that's far from my areas of expertise.

  Yep, that's about it. And they want you to pay for using it in a
commercial venture (which my system will be eventually), and I can't
justify (or afford) the expense.

    Brian

------- <blane at aa.net> -------------------- <http://www.aa.net/~blane> -------
  Embedded Systems Programmer, EET Student, Interactive Fiction author (RSN!)
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