64

I was thinking about this earlier this morning and was wondering why websites and devices don't offer fake logins for hackers? What I mean by that is that if a hacker finds out some of your details and tries to log in to a website (for example) the website will show that you have successfully logged in but will show dummy data that is completely fake.

That way the hacker won't know if they have got the login details correct or not. It will also protect people in a security situation. For instance, imagine a criminal has stolen someones phone and realises he can't access it. He then points a gun at the owner who then types in part of their details correct but some of them incorrectly. The device unlocks in fake mode, and the criminal then thinks they have access and they decide not to shoot the person because they have complied with their wishes. But the criminal never knows that what they see is just a fake login.

Has anyone implemented something like this? It seems like quite a good idea to me.

Cromulent
  • 1,113
  • 1
  • 9
  • 13
  • 19
  • Why do device/site owners need to do anything. Why can't users set this up for themselves? 2) If it is known that the device/site does this, then won't the attackers try to verify that they have true access? 3) Your approach does not survive Kerchoff's principle.
  • – schroeder Jun 01 '18 at 12:55
  • 1
    Would this not fall under "security by obscurity" - I feel like it would just give the owners a false sense of security in all honesty. –  Jun 01 '18 at 13:07
  • 2
    This is crappy for human hackers, but it can work decently well for unsophisticated bots. A site I administer uses fake POST submission forms to catch spambots and it works kinda well. – forest Jun 01 '18 at 13:22
  • If it is a known system, then the criminal just smile, load the gun and continue with : "Right, now the real one" - "It is !" - "Lier !" BANG And unfortunatly, it was. I don't see what security this gives. – Guillaume Beauvois Jun 01 '18 at 13:49
  • 20
    How does the website know that the user is a hacker and not the actual user? Is this referring to cases where a (non-chinese) user logs in from China or something like that? – SethWhite Jun 01 '18 at 14:26
  • 94
    What if I just mistype my password? I don't want to be logged into fake mode. I want to know I entered my password incorrectly. – Tom Bowen Jun 01 '18 at 15:21
  • 19
    How often do criminals ask victims to log into their accounts at gun point? This sounds like an extreme edge case that would just cause unnecessary confusion in the general case. I'm far more likely to mistype my password (happens several times a day) than get held up (hasn't happened yet). – Seth R Jun 01 '18 at 17:36
  • 15
  • @SethR: actually i've heard about that in the news a couple times, so it does happen. i don't think it's for ID theft, more so that the phone can be reset and sold. – dandavis Jun 01 '18 at 19:59
  • 3
    @Tom.Bowen89 the way around that concern would be a security image - an icon is displayed after you log in, and only the "real" user knows if it's the right one. If I select an image of a cat as my security image, and I log in and see a butterfly, I know I typed the password wrong. (Not trying to make an argument for the OP's approach in general, just addressing your specific concern.) – dwizum Jun 01 '18 at 20:43
  • This does exist, MobileSitter by Frauenhofer Institute (not affiliated) is one example I know of. They solve the problem in exactly the way @dwizum commented, by providing a visual clue (or you just memorise one password in the password manager and check it). – Narusan Jun 01 '18 at 22:04
  • 1
    As I know, this is implemented in some door locks. There is two codes: for regulal usage and for forced openning, which will also open the door but notify guards/police. – val - disappointed in SE Jun 02 '18 at 15:57
  • 1
    @SethWhite That is simple, you only need to check if the evil bit is set https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3514 – rypskar Jun 04 '18 at 08:47
  • @SethR Clearly you just aren't important enough :P – Pharap Jun 04 '18 at 14:00
  • Actually, this has been implemented. ESET anti-theft made a second windows account on my computer. It's unlocked and if a hacker takes the bait and clicks on it, ESET will take a picture of them, notify me, and start tracking my computer. – Byte11 Jun 04 '18 at 20:34