1 / 16

Trustworthy User Interface Design: Dynamic Security Skins

Trustworthy User Interface Design: Dynamic Security Skins. Rachna Dhamija and J.D. Tygar University of California, Berkeley TIPPI Workshop June 13, 2005. Security Properties for Usability. Limited human skills property Unmotivated users property General purpose graphics property

adolfo
Download Presentation

Trustworthy User Interface Design: Dynamic Security Skins

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Trustworthy User Interface Design:Dynamic Security Skins Rachna Dhamija and J.D. Tygar University of California, Berkeley TIPPI Workshop June 13, 2005

  2. Security Properties for Usability • Limited human skills property • Unmotivated users property • General purpose graphics property • Golden arches property • Barn door property

  3. Password Authenticated Key Agreement • A number of protocols exist: • EKE, SPEKE, SNAPI, AuthA, PAK, SRP, etc… • Advantages: • user doesn’t need a trusted device • secret stored in memory of the user • server doesn’t store password • no passwords sent over the network • user authentication & mutual authentication • BUT won’t stop phishing!

  4. Our Solution: Usability Goals • User must be able to verify password prompt, before entering password • Rely on human skills • To login, recognize 1 image & recall 1 password • To verify server, compare 2 images • Hard to spoof security indicators

  5. Trusted Password Window • Dedicated window • Trusted path  customization • Random photo assigned or chosen • Image stored in browser • Image overlaid across window • User recognizes image first • then enters password • Password not sent to server

  6. Security Indicators • How can the user distinguish secure windows? • static indicators • user customization • automated customization

  7. Firefox Browser - 4 SSL indicators

  8. Firefox browser - No unsecure indicators

  9. Customized Indicators: Petname Toolbar

  10. Automated Indicators:Secure Random Dynamic Boundaries

  11. Our Solution: Dynamic Security Skins • Automatically customize secure windows • Visual hashes • Random Art - visual hash algorithm • Generate unique abstract image for each authentication • Use the image to “skin” windows or web content • Browser generated or server generated

  12. Browser Generated Images • Browser chooses random number and generates image • Can be used to modify border or web elements

  13. Server Generated Images • Server & browser independently generate same image • Server can customize its own page

  14. Conclusions • Benefits: • Achieves mutual authentication • Resistant to phishing and spoofing • Relies on human skills • Weaknesses: • Users must check images (easier than checking a cert) • Local storage of personal image reduces portability, requires security • Doesn’t address spyware, keyloggers

  15. Status and Future Work • Iterative design & “lo-fi” testing of interface (Mozilla XUL and CSS) • Formal user study • DSS Mozilla extension • Published in SOUPS `05

More Related