NCSA has a history of establishing and maintaining a high degree
of security on the high-performance systems and on the networks
that connect to those systems. NCSA's aggressive policy seeks to
identify and address potential or real security breaches. The result
is a solid high-performance computing environment with a high level of
security. Defensive measures are quickly employed in those rare cases of
intrusion with the goal of not compromising user data and the HPC systems.
In November 1998, NCSA eliminated the use of clear text logins and
passwords on its high-performance computer systems to further enhance
network security. Throughout 1998, a joint NCSA/Alliance and NPACI
security team coordinated efforts to eliminate clear text passwords
and other computer security weaknesses. The team discussed their general
security plans with representatives from the Defense Department and
NSF-funded laboratories and agreed that the various organizations would
use interoperable authentication schemes and security architectures.
So-called "clear text passwords and logins" are unencrypted
and unscrambled and thus vulnerable to detection by "sniffers"
on the Internet. Internet "sniffing" can allow hackers to obtain
passwords. Hackers often use the newly discovered passwords to login to
a system.
Former NCSA Director Larry Smarr noted at the time of implementation that:
"The use of clear text logins and passwords represents
the number one security vulnerability on the Internet today.
NCSA's main motivation for [the joint NCSA/Alliance and NPACI]
project is the elimination of that vulnerability."
NCSA, in conjunction with NPACI, implemented a plan to eliminate clear
text connections. All allocated users and NCSA staff were required
to select and use of two encryption systems: Kerberos or Secure Shell
(SSH). New users to NCSA systems (allocated or staff) must implement
one of the security software options.
Reporting Security Incidents
To report a security problem contact the NCSA Helpdesk
at (217) 244-0710 anytime. For security questions or non-emergency
incident information, please email
security@ncsa.uiuc.edu.