April 4, 2017 By Larry Loeb 2 min read

At February’s RSA Conference in San Francisco, Thycotic surveyed more than 250 security professionals about how they used passwords on their social media accounts. Surprisingly, 53 percent of respondents said they had not changed their social network passwords in more than a year. The firm also found that 20 percent of respondents have never changed their social media passwords at any time.

The survey highlighted how these unchanged passwords enable attackers to have continuous access to victims’ accounts. The longer a password is active, the more useful it is to fraudsters.

The Vulnerability of Social Media Accounts

A social network can act as a portal to other parts of a user’s online presence, including work matters. Some social networks have implemented OAuth-style authentication, which connects to other sites and apps. OAuth uses the social network to authenticate a user. If that social network is compromised, it can serve as a wide stepping-stone to other programs and information.

The survey also found that security professionals’ password quality wasn’t always up to snuff. It determined that 30 percent of respondents have used or are still using passwords made up of information related to birthdays, addresses and pets’ or children’s names in work situations. These are considered weak passwords since a determined adversary could derive them using public information and brute-force methods.

“Social logins create a major security risk because they become the master key for all other accounts,” Joseph Carson, chief security scientist at Thycotic, told SecurityWeek. “The problem stems further because it is not a proper vault and is used for more than just social logins — such as for communication, email, browsing and online shopping — so it is easily targeted and exploited.”

Setting Professionals Up for Success

However, it seems from this survey that even security professionals, who should be especially aware of security best practices, are leaving themselves at risk by using weak passwords and OAuth-style authentication for certain applications. Since social networks tend to allow default access rather than strictly authenticating users, a cracked password for a social account could enable fraudsters to access more critical, work-related data.

Thycotic advised security leaders and users to enable multifactor authentication whenever possible, expand and update security awareness training, audit and change passwords periodically and implement password management tools for minimized access and increased security.

More from

SoaPy: Stealthy enumeration of Active Directory environments through ADWS

10 min read - Introduction Over time, both targeted and large-scale enumeration of Active Directory (AD) environments have become increasingly detected due to modern defensive solutions. During our internship at X-Force Red this past summer, we noticed FalconForce’s SOAPHound was becoming popular for enumerating Active Directory environments. This tool brought a new perspective to Active Directory enumeration by performing collection via Active Directory Web Services (ADWS) instead of directly through Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) as other AD enumeration tools had in the past.…

Smoltalk: RCE in open source agents

26 min read - Big shoutout to Hugging Face and the smolagents team for their cooperation and quick turnaround for a fix! Introduction Recently, I have been working on a side project to automate some pentest reconnaissance with AI agents. Just after I started this project, Hugging Face announced the release of smolagents, a lightweight framework for building AI agents that implements the methodology described in the ReAct paper, emphasizing reasoning through iterative decision-making. Interestingly, smolagents enables agents to reason and act by generating…

4 ways to bring cybersecurity into your community

4 min read - It’s easy to focus on technology when talking about cybersecurity. However, the best prevention measures rely on the education of those who use technology. Organizations training their employees is the first step. But the industry needs to expand the concept of a culture of cybersecurity and take it from where it currently stands as an organizational responsibility to a global perspective.When every person who uses technology — for work, personal use and school — views cybersecurity as their responsibility, it…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today