Password Policy

Written by Alistair McDonald


Continued from page 1

Rule 2: Use long passwords, including both upper and lower case, numerics and quotation marks. Now, there's a temptation to write down difficult passwords. If you do write them down, then disguise them. Hide them in a word search grid in your diary -repparttar answer will jump out at you, but a thief will struggle to findrepparttar 107609 password. Never keep them in a desk drawer or onrepparttar 107610 monitor. A better idea is to use a utility called Password Safe, http://passwordsafe.sourceforge.net/. This keeps all your passwords safe, using very strong encryption.

Rule 3: Never write passwords down in an easy to read form. Rule 4: Never leave passwords nearrepparttar 107611 PC. There's another problem with passwords, they (andrepparttar 107612 accounts that they are associated with) are often shared between several users. This may be done only on certain occasions, for example when a key employee takes vacation or is sick, or may be due to only one account being shared within a team. When an account is shared, there is no audit trail. This creates an opportunity for fraud. Each person should have an account, and only use their own account. For employees sick or on holiday, they should not be asked for their password, but their password should be reset byrepparttar 107613 helpdesk, withrepparttar 107614 new password given torepparttar 107615 appropriate manager. The helpdesk should become used to managers requesting password resets for their employees, however, they should always verifyrepparttar 107616 requestor, and log all events. Whenrepparttar 107617 employee returns from vacation, they should get their password reset again.

Rule 5: Never share accounts or give out passwords. Password resets should be used There is also a danger when sharing a password on more than one system. It makesrepparttar 107618 user's life easy if they only have to remember one password. Single-sign-on systems can be very useful inrepparttar 107619 corporate environment, but users should NOT use their work passwords for any systems they use at home. Many web sites are poorly written, and passwords may be available via techniques such as SQL injection, or simply from fraud byrepparttar 107620 operators. There are many ways in which a password can be learned. Once a password is known, a website operator might trace site activity back to your company, and might attempt to break in usingrepparttar 107621 password.

Rule 6: Never use a work password for leisure The last point I wish to make is when employees leaverepparttar 107622 company. Every account that they have access to should have its password reset as soon as they leaverepparttar 107623 building. The manager can take control ofrepparttar 107624 accounts if required, butrepparttar 107625 passwords should be reset as soon as possible. This is vitally important if shared accounts are in use.

Rule 7: Reset accounts as soon as employees leaverepparttar 107626 firm This concludesrepparttar 107627 article on email and passwords. I hope that it help you to clarify whatrepparttar 107628 policy for your organization should be.

Alistair McDonald isrepparttar 107629 author of SpamAssassin: A Pracitcal Guide to Configuration, Customization, and Integration. You can read more about Alistair's book here: http://www.packtpub.com/book/spamassassin

Alistair McDonald is a freelance IT consultant based in the UK. He has worked in IT for over 15 years and specializes in C++ and Perl development and IT infrastructure management. He is a strong advocate of open source, and has strong cross-platform skills. He prefers vim over vi, emacs over Xemacs or vim, and bash over ksh or csh. He is very much a family man and spends as much time as possible with his family enjoying life.


Expert Guide to DVD Camcorders

Written by Kenny Hemphill


Continued from page 1

And thirdly, you can easily watch your home movies by removingrepparttar DVD fromrepparttar 107608 camera and playing it in practically any DVD player.

However, there are negative factors to. The most siginificant one is that video is encoded as MPEG-2 on a mini DVD camcorder, as opposed to DV format. This means that it needs specialist software to edit - you can't just use your regular video editing program (unless it specifically supports MPEG-2). And if a Mac user you're out of luck, as there are no MPEG-2 editing applications forrepparttar 107609 Mac.

Also, mini DVD camcorders tend to cost more than similarly specified mini DV cameras. Andrepparttar 107610 media is also more expensive. However, if you don't intend editing your movies and don't mindrepparttar 107611 extra cost, a mini dvd camcorder does offer extraordinary convenience.

Kenny Hemphill is the editor and publisher of The HDTV Tuner


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