From: Jeremy Cooper <jeremy@crl.com>
To: Johan Helsingius <julf@penet.fi>
Message Hash: fd6959c866b011c037f4d339e1e3fba8797eca078a659d47b4cbdc18de5ce337
Message ID: <Pine.3.87.9404181620.A24510-0100000@crl2.crl.com>
Reply To: <199404181430.AA28278@milou.eunet.fi>
UTC Datetime: 1994-04-18 23:50:54 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 18 Apr 94 16:50:54 PDT
From: Jeremy Cooper <jeremy@crl.com>
Date: Mon, 18 Apr 94 16:50:54 PDT
To: Johan Helsingius <julf@penet.fi>
Subject: Re: Autentication gadgets
In-Reply-To: <199404181430.AA28278@milou.eunet.fi>
Message-ID: <Pine.3.87.9404181620.A24510-0100000@crl2.crl.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain
On Mon, 18 Apr 1994, Johan Helsingius wrote:
>
> I remember seeing some discussion about the security gadgets people from Bell
> Labs, amonst others, used for logging in from remote sites. It was a simple
> credit-card-calculator-like challenge-response device. Any pointers?
>
> Julf
A similar one they use at the white house uses a card system. The card
has an internal clock that is synchronized once to a clock on the system.
The card uses a special algorithm that changes the password every second
or so in sync with the main system. When you plug into the system, it reads
your card, and if it is in sync, then you are allowed access.
_ . _ ___ _ . _
===-|)/\\/|V|/\/\ (_)/_\|_|\_/(_)/_\|_| Stop by for an excursion into the-===
===-|)||| | |\/\/ mud.crl.com 8888 (_) Virtual Bay Area! -===
Return to April 1994
Return to “Johan Helsingius <julf@penet.fi>”