There was an interesting article recently in The New York Times about getting locked out of a Gmail account.
In August, blogger Alan Shimel of StillSecure wrote about his problems regaining access to a Yahoo e-mail account. Suffice it to say that if someone learns your Web mail password, it's a very difficult situation--one that may not end well.
For one thing, the Web mail provider may not know enough about you to determine the true account owner. Worse still, anyone using a free Web mail account from Google (Gmail), Yahoo, or Microsoft (Hotmail) can't expect to talk to a human being to resolve a problem with their account. Talking to person at Google requires a subscription to Google Apps Premier Edition for $50 a year. Microsoft and Yahoo similarly offer telephone support only to "premium" customers.
If you care about a Web mail account, then some homework may be in order.
Alternate e-mail address
One thing Web mail users should have associated with their account is an alternate e-mail address. This is typically optional, but it can be critical, should you get locked out. I think you're safer not using an address from the same provider as your alternate. That is, don't provide a Gmail e-mail address as the alternate for a Gmail account. Too many eggs in one basket.
If you're like me, with no recollection or notes about the alternate e-mail address associated with your Web mail account, here's how to check (after first logging in to your account):
Gmail: Click on the "Settings" link in the top right corner, then go to the "Accounts" tab and click on the link in the "Google Account settings" section.
Classic Hotmail: Click on "Options" in the top right corner, then View and Edit your personal information. Your alternate e-mail address is displayed along with a link to change it.
Classic Yahoo: Click on "Options" in the top right corner, then "Mail Options", then (on the left) click on "Account Information" and re-enter your password. Yahoo will then display "Alternate Email 1" and "Alternate Email 2." Yahoo supports two alternate e-mail addresses, a great safety net, since our e-mail providers change over time.
Secure connections
Gmail, Hotmail, and Yahoo Mail all offer secure connections when you initially log on and enter your password. Hotmail and Yahoo then switch back to unsecured, HTTP, connections. Gmail offers an option to always use a secure HTTPS connection, even when reading and writing e-mail. Highly recommended.
To enable this feature, Gmail users should click on "Settings" in the top-right corner, then on the default "General" tab, scroll to the bottom of the page, and turn on the radio button to "Always use https."
Truthiness
Web mail may be one of those places where little white lies are acceptable. The governor of Alaska, who recently had her Yahoo e-mail exposed to the world, set herself up for failure by truthfully answering some questions.
Every Web mail system asks for personal information as a means of identification, should you lose your password. The problem is that this personal information can also be used by a bad guy to learn your password.
Yahoo and Hotmail limit their secret questions to a handful of preselected questions. The straw that broke the camel's back for the governor of Alaska was the question of where she met her spouse. Being a public figure, it didn't take much guessing for someone to correctly answer this question and fool Yahoo into thinking that person was the governor. There were some other canned questions too, but they were also easy to answer using public information.
Public figure or not, there is no reason to answer Web mail security questions truthfully. After all, who are you really lying to? A potential bad guy trying to learn your password.
So, when asked the name of your favorite teacher, feel free to respond "xyz" or with any random word or sentence that no one will guess. Then, of course, write it down in a safe place. The price for making up random answers is the burden of recovery. This is the eternal relationship between security and convenience. More security always entails less convenience.
Gmail is the most flexible of the major providers. It lets you choose your own secret question, thus giving you a fighting chance of picking a question to which no one else knows the answer. Still, if you have a safe place for storing passwords, a totally random answer can't be guessed.
To review your security question in Gmail, click on the "Settings" link in the top-right corner, then go to the "Accounts" tab, and click on the "Google Account settings" link in the section of the same name. Finally, click on "Change security question." You will have to re-enter your Gmail password.
Users of the classic Hotmail system can review their security question by clicking on "options" in the top-right corner, then clicking on "View and edit your personal information."
Yahoo e-mail users may be in for a surprise. Simply knowing your password is not sufficient to view, let alone change, your security question. As described in How do I update my secret question? Yahoo requires you to "verify the Answer to your current Secret Question in order to update it." I'm screwed.
Does someone already know your password?
If someone learned your Web mail password, would you know? It's one thing to have your e-mail read, but it's another to have it read over and over, day after day, by someone who knows your password and is smart enough not to tip their hat by changing it.
Potentially, there is much that Web mail providers can do to let account owners know that someone else is logging into their account when they're asleep. As far as I can tell, Hotmail and Yahoo mail do absolutely nothing in this regard. Gmail, however, offers an audit trail, if you know where to look.
When Gmail users first log in, they should scroll down to the bottom of the initial page and look for a message such as:
Last account activity: 22 hours ago at IP 66.88.111.222. Details
or
Last account activity: 22 minutes ago on this computer. Details
If you didn't last log in to your Gmail account when the message indicates, then someone knows your password.
Internet Protocol addresses can be linked to both an Internet service provider and a country, for sure, and maybe even to a city within the country. For more on this, see my earlier posting "What does your IP address say about you?"
Clicking on the "Details" link offers a longer history of Gmail account activity and an indication of whether the account is currently logged on at another computer. Letting one person log in to a Gmail account simultaneously from two different computers strikes me as a design mistake. But given that design, Gmail users can log off other computers that are currently logged into the same account. Needless to say, this, too, can alert you that someone knows your password.
Information about the most recent Gmail account activity is presented on the bottom of every Gmail Web page. For more, see Last account activity in the Gmail Help.
Test password recovery
Anyone involved in backing up computer files knows the importance of testing the recovery process, and the same applies with Web mail. The best way to ensure that you can recover or reset your password is to try it.
Yahoo password recovery (thanks to the governor of Alaska, it's now the infamous Yahoo password recovery) starts out by asking for your birthday, country of residence, and postal code. Without this gatekeeper information, knowing the secret question is useless. Even something as simple as your postal code needs to be saved rather than remembered because, as Yahoo points out, it may be from your home, your office, or a prior residence or prior work location.
Hotmail password recovery starts with the option to either "Use my location information and secret answer to verify my identity" or to "Send password reset instructions to me in e-mail." If you go the first route and answer the questions correctly, you get to choose a new password.
The location information is the same as Yahoo's--country, state, and ZIP code. If you go the second route, an e-mail message is sent to the alternate e-mail account with two links, one for confirming the request and resetting the password and another for doing nothing.
Gmail error handling isn't limited to just password recovery; they deal with a whole host of problems accessing your account, including:
I forgot my password
I forgot my username
My account has been compromised
My password doesn't seem to be working
Loading issues
Another error or problem
If you forget a Gmail password, you're taken here where, as with the other two systems, you enter the user ID and get in through a Captcha. At this point, there are no options. Google sends an e-mail to the alternate e-mail address. It doesn't display the entire alternate e-mail address (Hotmail, in contrast, does); just the domain name.
I tested this using a Yahoo.com e-mail address as the alternate to a Gmail account. Word to the wise: don't do this. The message from Gmail was treated as spam by Yahoo. The message includes a link that, when clicked, takes you to a Web page where you can enter a new password.
If you no longer have access to the alternate e-mail address, Google advises you to "...try the 'Forgot your password?' link again after five days. At that point, you'll be able to reset your password by answering the security question you provided when you created your account."
Web mail accounts may start out as toys or curiosities, but for many people, they end up being important. A little homework now may save a ton of grief later.
See a summary of all my Defensive Computing postings.
Sarah Palin
(Credit: Alaska governor's office)A grand jury in Chattanooga, Tenn., investigating who hacked Republican vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin's Yahoo e-mail ended its meeting on Tuesday without indicting a Tennessee lawmaker's son.
Speculation on the Internet has centered on 20-year-old David Kernell, a University of Tennessee student.
On the Internet forum 4Chan.org, where the e-mail break-in was first announced, posts attributed to someone named "Rubico" more or less described how the Yahoo account had been compromised using the password recovery feature. The e-mail address used for Rubico has been linked to Kernell.
Kernell's father, Democratic Tennessee state representative Mike Kernel, further fueled speculation last week when he confirmed his son was the subject of the investigation. On Saturday, investigators searched David Kernell's campus apartment.
Justice Department spokeswoman Laura Sweeney told the
There are mixed reports on Friday whether or not the son of a Tennessee state representative has been contacted by the FBI or Secret Service in connection with Sarah Palin's hacked Yahoo Mail account.
The father, Democratic Rep. Mike Kernell has told Knoxville News Sentinel and The Tennessean that despite a lot of online chatter, no formal contact has been made.
The person who gained access to Palin's e-mail account did so by guessing details of her life, then changed the e-mail password to "popcorn."
Using the online nickname Rubico, someone posted details of the hack to a forum on the 4Chan.org Web site starting on Tuesday. Password-protected zip files containing the contents of the now-deleted e-mail account once belonging to the Republican vice-presidential candidate have also been posted to the forum.
Subsequent posts by Rubico to the /b/ board over the last few days have provided additional insight into how the hack was carried out, although many of the posts have now been deleted.
Details describing how someone hacked into Sarah Palin's Yahoo Mail account emerged on Thursday, and it appears to have been done with little more than social engineering, the process of acquiring personal information through social manipulation.
Meanwhile, the Knoxville News Sentinel is reporting that a 20-year-old University of Tennessee student has been contacted in connection to the federal investigation of the break-in. Further details are not known.
Since Tuesday, anonymous posters using a forum on the 4Chan.org Web site have been circulating password-protected zip files containing the contents of the now-deleted e-mail account once belonging to the Republican vice presidential candidate. Various posts to the /b/ board have also provided insight into how the hack was carried out.
Like most Web account services, Yahoo Mail provides an option to reset or recover one's user name and password. What is unclear is how the account recovery was rerouted from the alternative e-mail address chosen by Palin to a secondary e-mail address.
When Yahoo Mail prompted for Palin's birthday, one poster said it took only 15 seconds on Wikipedia to answer that question. When it prompted for ZIP code, Wasilla, Ala., has only two ZIP Codes. As for Palin's personal security question "Where did you meet your spouse?" that did slow the process down. The poster claimed it took several tries but eventually hit upon the correct answer: Wasilla High.
Web mail accounts are not alone in using online security questions. In May Axiom, a Little Rock, Ark.-based data warehouse company, announced it was introducing a new biographical authentication service that asks online banking and e-commerce site users random questions based on their personal lives such as "How many fireplaces are in your current residence?" The answer can be obtained from any real estate Web site.
4Chan's "random" /b/ board is no stranger to controversy. In January, members waged an online media war against the Church of Scientology. Prior to that, the site popularized Lolcats, pictures of kittens with cute captions, and rickrolling, linking to videos of Rick Astley's 1987 song "Never Gonna Give You Up".
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