Computer password inventor Fernando Corbato dies at 93. He also helped
dramatically improve the speed of computing.
Jon Fingas, @jonfingas
Computer security just lost one of its founders. Fernando "Corby" Corbato,
credited with inventing the computer password, has died at the age of 93.
The MIT researcher devised the concept of password-protected user accounts
when establishing his Compatible Time-Sharing System, which let multiple
people use a computer at the same time. It was just a matter of establishing
"compartmentalization" and basic privacy, Corbato told the Wall Street
Journal in a 2014 interview, but the move would help shape digital security
going forward.
It's not Corbato's only pioneering effort, either. CTSS' simultaneous usage
model reduced the wait time for computer responses from hours to second,
making the technology far more practical. His Multics time-sharing system,
meanwhile, paved the way for future operating systems like Linux with
finer-grained privacy controls, a hierarchical file system and other
features that people take for granted today.
He was also the impetus behind "Corbato's Law," which claims that
programmers will write the same amount of code regardless of the language
they're using. It made a case for using higher-level languages instead of
close-to-the-metal code that's typically more time-consuming to write.
Corbato in his later years was aware that passwords had their problems --
the internet made those logins "kind of a nightmare," he told the WSJ. It's
no secret that the industry is moving away from passwords to both thwart
account hijackers and improve convenience. Still, there's little doubt that
Corbato's work helped establish the fundamentals of modern computing.