[nycbug-talk] password repository

Isaac Levy ike at lesmuug.org
Thu Dec 31 14:09:57 EST 2009


On Dec 31, 2009, at 12:13 PM, Jesse Callaway wrote:

> On Wed, Dec 30, 2009 at 11:46 AM, Okan Demirmen <okan at demirmen.com> wrote:
>> what do you all use, recommend, love, hate?
>> 
>> what about "shared" repositories in environments where you have a bunch
>> of sysadmins, all of whom should be able to view/add/modify entires and
>> such?
>> 
>> while this is off-BSD topic, i'm sure all of us have run into such a
>> question at some point.
>> 
>> cheers,
>> okan
>> _______________________________________________
>> talk mailing list
>> talk at lists.nycbug.org
>> http://lists.nycbug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk
>> 
> 
> 
> I've talked about multi-key encryption but it looks like a pain in the
> butt to me typing-wise, never used it. Here's a link to a message
> thread on how to do it with gpg
> http://lists.gnupg.org/pipermail/gnupg-users/2003-September/020170.html
> The thought is you can spam everyone, and everyone can spam back
> regarding changes and it's encrypted n-ways. As computers get faster I
> think this technology will start to catch on. That said, I never tried
> it and it might be reasonably fast up to some number of keys.

PKI dreaminess :)

Ideally, PKI does seem to deal with this problem in a most ideal fashion- but it doesn't sound like it scales back/forth well for dynamic groups over time- (e.g. Sysadmins in a group/work enviornment, people coming/going, etc...).  For example, what to do when someone leaves the group?  Or how does a new user get access to the old data, (before their key was put in the mix?).

The version control stuff is awesome for those cases where you've just come across a problem with a router/server/blah whose only access uses cridentials for people who no longer exist in your enviornment- and left far before you came onboard...  To any size group, this can be a serious case.

Hrm.  There has to be some old slick PKI paper or software which attacks this exact problem with PKI slickness?

> 
> The best web-based thing I've found was PassPack. It's totally
> awesome. Each user has their own login to PassPack. Users can share
> passwords and assign read/write privileges to them per item being
> shared.

Hrm?  I dug around for it online and there's tons of other noise...  Sounds awful dangerous, but interesting-

Rocket-
.ike





More information about the talk mailing list