Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1629076> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 42 of
42
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1629076 subject Q8718193.
- Q1629076 subject Q8890071.
- Q1629076 abstract "S/KEY is a one-time password system developed for authentication to Unix-like operating systems, especially from dumb terminals or untrusted public computers on which one does not want to type a long-term password. A user's real password is combined in an offline device with a short set of characters and a decrementing counter to form a single-use password. Because each password is only used once, they are useless to password sniffers.Because the short set of characters does not change until the counter reaches zero, it is possible to prepare a list of single-use passwords, in order, that can be carried by the user. Alternatively, the user can present the password, characters, and desired counter value to a local calculator to generate the appropriate one-time password that can then be transmitted over the network in the clear. The latter form is more common and practically amounts to challenge-response authentication.S/KEY is supported in Linux (via pluggable authentication modules), OpenBSD, NetBSD, and FreeBSD, and a generic open-source implementation can be used to enable its use on other systems. One common implementation is called OPIE. S/KEY is a trademark of Telcordia Technologies, formerly known as Bell Communications Research (Bellcore).S/KEY is also sometimes referred to as Lamport's scheme, after its author, Leslie Lamport. It was developed by Neil Haller, Phil Karn and John Walden at Bellcore in the late 1980s. With the expiration of the basic patents onpublic-key cryptography and the widespread use of laptop computers running SSH andother cryptographic protocols that can secure an entire session, not just the password, S/KEY is fallinginto disuse. Schemes that implement two-factor authentication, by comparison, are growing in use.".
- Q1629076 thumbnail Skey_password_generation.svg?width=300.
- Q1629076 wikiPageExternalLink jsotp.
- Q1629076 wikiPageExternalLink about.
- Q1629076 wikiPageExternalLink j2me-otp.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q1059963.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q1137840.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q1369730.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q14656.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q1500258.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q16988876.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q170460.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q17086335.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q201339.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q206494.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q212108.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q216378.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q216640.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q252132.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q34215.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q34225.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q34236.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q388.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q3962.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q477202.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q54366.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q554830.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q5678864.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q616554.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q7073101.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q7119185.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q7182058.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q7695688.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q8718193.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q8890071.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q9135.
- Q1629076 wikiPageWikiLink Q92613.
- Q1629076 comment "S/KEY is a one-time password system developed for authentication to Unix-like operating systems, especially from dumb terminals or untrusted public computers on which one does not want to type a long-term password. A user's real password is combined in an offline device with a short set of characters and a decrementing counter to form a single-use password.".
- Q1629076 label "S/KEY".
- Q1629076 depiction Skey_password_generation.svg.