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UN warns on password “explosion”

Analysis

Growing use of the web is stripping people of their personal privacy, warns a UN agency report.

The number of passwords and logins web users need makes it inevitable they will re-use phrases, warned the International Telecommunications Union. Re-using these identifiers puts people at serious risk of falling victim to identity theft, said the ITU report. It called on regulators and businesses to find better ways for people to identify themselves to websites. Net trends towards personalization and efforts by websites to track users are leading users to maintain a growing list of the logins and passwords. But this comes with risks, warns the ITU report. "This may cause security breaches, and leave them vulnerable to the machinations of identity thieves ever increasing in number and inventiveness," said the report. The UK government estimates that ID theft costs the nation £1.7 billion (€2.52 billion) every year. As well as being dangerous, being forced to generate so many login names and passwords wasted time and was very unwieldy, said the report. "The lack of coordination in identification systems is a source of growing inconvenience to users and needs to be addressed rapidly," it said. The UN agency urged net firms, businesses and government bodies to create better or more unified ways for people to use websites that would help to safeguard their identity online. The growing problem of ID theft could stunt the growth of net commerce as users become wary of spending money online, warned the ITU. The warning about the growing number of online identities that people maintain came in the 2006 Internet report from the ITU. (BBC NEWS)

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