Watch out
for those cans of compressed air. You might have thought they were an
innocent way to clean the crumbs out of your keyboard, but in reality,
they're a hacker tool that could help someone get the keys to your
encrypted data!
This is
one of those computer security stories that seems to have captured the
general public's attention, and it's been covered by news organizations as
diverse as The New York Times, Fox News, and
Computerworld. To summarize: When the keys used to encrypt a
computer's hard disk are stored in the memory of that computer, the keys
can be retained in the memory when the computer goes into sleep or
hibernate mode and even briefly (a few seconds or minutes) after you shut
the computer off. Eight researches from Princeton University, the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, and Wind River Systems found that they
could keep the keys around longer—up to an hour, in some cases—when they
froze the memory chip by spraying it with compressed air or by other
means. This extra time gave the researches the minutes they needed to use
other tools to capture the keys from the memory and then crack the disk
encryption. The researchers were successful in hacking Windows Vista's
BitLocker, Mac OS X's FileVault, Linux dm-crypt, and TrueCrypt. They
reported their findings in the paper "Lest We Remember: Cold Boot
Attacks on Encryption Keys" and kicked off a discussion in "Cold Boot Attacks:
Vulnerable While Sleeping" (February 26) and "New Research Result: Cold
Boot Attacks on Disk Encryption" (February 21) on the Freedom to
Tinker blog. News organizations picked up the story from there.
In "Disk
encryption: Balancing security, usability and risk assessment" on
MSDN's Windows Vista Security blog, Russ Humphries responded to the
researchers' findings by mentioning a few techniques administrators and
users can employ to address the disk encryption vulnerability and pointing
to more best practice guidance for using BitLocker in "Data
Encryption Toolkit for Mobile PCs".
The
simplest measure to take to protect the encrypted data on your laptop
might be to turn the system off when you aren't using it—and make sure
it's completely off. Don't expect sleep or hibernate mode to protect your
encryption keys. Another lesson, which I'm sure most of us have already
learned, is that someone will always poke holes in each new security
technology. Security vendors, security administrators, and users not only
need to be vigilant about using the latest technologies that they can
afford and that make sense for their situation but also about using good
common sense to keep data safe. And by good common sense, I mean keeping
physical control over your laptop, and avoiding people who are waving cans
of compressed air at your system!
For
general information about BitLocker, go to:
Vista's
BitLocker Drive Encryption
Access
Denied: Comparing BitLocker with EFS
End of Article
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