G
Greg Tyler
I created a database (MDB), using a master password to secure it from the
naughty folk what want my data. It all works fine, but when I open the MDB in
Notepad and search for "pwd=", it finds a string stating "pwd=gunter" (gunter
being the database password). In fact, it finds this string four times.
This means that anyone opening the database can simply look at the source
beforehand, get the password and then have full access to all my terribly
secure and utterly confidential information.
My question is whether I'm doing something wrong? Did I set up the password
wrong? Am I being misled? I'm aware that accdb has greater security, but as
the majority of users are still on Office 2003, I honestly can't help but use
MDB files.
I also want to ask why there's so little mention of this elsewhere on the
tubes? Surely this is a major security flaw, and yet I can find minimal
discussion of it...
naughty folk what want my data. It all works fine, but when I open the MDB in
Notepad and search for "pwd=", it finds a string stating "pwd=gunter" (gunter
being the database password). In fact, it finds this string four times.
This means that anyone opening the database can simply look at the source
beforehand, get the password and then have full access to all my terribly
secure and utterly confidential information.
My question is whether I'm doing something wrong? Did I set up the password
wrong? Am I being misled? I'm aware that accdb has greater security, but as
the majority of users are still on Office 2003, I honestly can't help but use
MDB files.
I also want to ask why there's so little mention of this elsewhere on the
tubes? Surely this is a major security flaw, and yet I can find minimal
discussion of it...