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French Data Protection Authority Issues Password Guidance

By Odia Kagan on December 4, 2018

Keep your passwords close…and complex, and encrypted and unique, and ever-changing.

In the wake of recent data breaches involving passwords, the French data protection authority, the CNIL, has published guidelines for adequate passwords.

Some highlights include:

  • If you use a password as your sole method of authentication, it needs to be at least 12 characters consisting of uppercase letters, numbers and special characters.
  • If you use additional measures of protection, the password may be less complex.
  • A passphrase is better than a password, and the CNIL developed a tool for producing passwords from sentences.
  • Your authentication function must (i) use a public algorithm deemed strong and (ii) have a software implementation that is free of known vulnerabilities.
  • NEVER store passwords in cleartext – require and allow periodic renewal of passwords.

For details, see the full guidelines.

  • Posted in:
    Privacy & Data Security
  • Blog:
    Privacy Compliance & Data Security
  • Organization:
    Fox Rothschild LLP
  • Article: View Original Source

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