Source - http://gma.yahoo.com/
By - JOANNA STERN
Category - San Diego Hotel Meeting Space
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn
By - JOANNA STERN
Category - San Diego Hotel Meeting Space
Posted By - San Diego Hampton Inn
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| San Diego Hotel Meeting Space |
It might be convenient to save your Facebook or e-mail password in your
Chrome browser so you don't have to repeatedly type it in, but you might
want to think twice before you use that setting.
Web designer Elliott Kember noticed a security flaw in the Google Chrome browser earlier this week. When he went to transfer the bookmarks from his Safari browser
to Chrome, he went digging into some simple Chrome settings only to
find that when you go to import bookmarks from another browser, the
software automatically defaults to bringing over your saved passwords.
While there is a check mark to disable the password import, it can't be
unchecked on a Mac, something ABC News was able to confirm.
Google plans to fix that specific problem soon, confirming to ABC News
that the automatic syncing of passwords from Safari browsers was a bug
in the Mac version of Chrome.
"Thanks to our users, who discovered a bug in Chrome's import interface,
which improperly represents how passwords are handled upon import from
other browsers," Google said in a statement provided to ABC News. "We
developed a fix to better represent how passwords are handled across
platforms, which will roll out to all users soon."
However, that fix won't solve another problem Kember found. He went a
step further to point out that if you do import those passwords to
Chrome they, and any other passwords you have saved in the browser, are
completely unprotected. By typing in chrome://settings/passwords in
Chrome address bar, you are able to see the saved passwords and
usernames for the websites you visit.
"There's no master password, no security, not even a prompt that 'these
passwords are visible,'" Kember wrote on his blog. Essentially, anyone
who was able to use your computer could see the passwords you have
saved.
Google did not have an official comment about why it doesn't do more to
protect saved passwords. However, Google's Head of Chrome Security,
Justin Schuh, took to technology site Y Combinator to explain why Google
doesn't require a master password in order to get at those other
passwords.
"We've debated it over and over again, but the conclusion we always come
to is that we don't want to provide users with a false sense of
security and encourage risky behavior," Schuh wrote. "We want to be very
clear that when you grant someone access to your OS user account, that
they can get at everything. Because, in effect, that's really what they
get."
Competing browsers like Safari and Internet Explorer require you type in
the system password to view those passwords. While Google has provided a
number of password security tips over the last few months at its Good to Know website,
ultimately, security experts say, Chrome has always had this security
vulnerability and people should use encrypted password managers to save
passwords.
"Bottom line: The public should not be using their browser to manage
their passwords," McAfee security expert Robert Siciliano told ABC News.
"Password managers have now evolved to a point where they have military
grade encryption and they work across browsers, across devices and
store your data locally and in the Cloud."
Siciliano recommended McAfee's All Access password manager.
He also reminded people to use two-factor authentication for e-mail and
other important accounts, which requires users to confirm their identity
with two pieces of log-in information, and to make all passwords strong
with a mix of upper- and lowercase letters and numbers.

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