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Cryptographers sound warnings on Microsoft security plan

configure on 15 April 2003 - 17:12 · 5 comments & 697 views

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Just three weeks before Microsoft Corp. publicly details plans to create a secure operating mode for Windows PCs, two top cryptographers have raised concerns about Microsoft's approach.

Whitfield Diffie, a distinguished engineer at Sun Microsystems Laboratories, said an integrated security scheme for computers is inevitable, but the Microsoft approach is flawed because it fails to give users control over their security keys. Ronald Rivest, an MIT professor and founder of RSA Security, called for a broad public debate about the Microsoft move.

Microsoft first tipped its plans, formerly code-named Palladium, about a year ago. Since then some details have emerged about the concepts for what Microsoft now calls the next-generation secure computing base (NGSCB, pronounced "enscub").

Microsoft has detailed its plans to as many as 30 partners under non-disclosure agreements. The company plans to unveil the full technical details and partnerships behind its plans at the Windows Hardware Engineering Conference in early May.

The Microsoft approach “lends itself to market domination, lock out, and not really owning your own computer. That's going to create a fight that dwarfs the debates of the 1990's,” said Diffie as part of a broad panel discussion on cryptography at the RSA Conference here Monday (April 14).

“To risk sloganeering, I say you need to hold the keys to your own computer,” added Diffie to strong applause for the audience of several hundred security specialists.

News source: EETimes - Cryptographers sound warnings on Microsoft security plan


“We should be watching this to make sure there are the proper levels of support we really do want,” said Rivest.

“The right way to look at this is you are putting a virtual set-top box inside your PC. You are essentially renting out part of your PC to people you may not trust,” said Rivest in an interview after the panel.

“We need to understand the full implications of this architecture. This stuff may slip quietly on to people's desktops, but I suspect it will be more a case of a lot of debate,” he added.

Rivest said some experts have discussed setting up a forum in technical society for such a debate, but he was unaware of any current moves to do that. Likewise Diffie said he was not aware of any specific alternative to NGSCB in the works at Sun.

“You want a standard, not competing approaches for something like this,” Diffie added.

Sun once considered but rejected the notion of releasing a computer that would not boot without the presence of a cryptographically signed operating system. The process of selling the computer would have been similar to a cryptographic transaction of handing over security keys to the end user.

In Microsoft's NGSCB approach, users would have to consciously evoke a secure operating mode that would be turned off by default. New instructions in the CPU as well as changes in the memory controller would help carve out a protected space in main memory to load a small, secure operating system kernel.

The PC approach also depends on a $5 encryption and flash module that assists authentication and identification functions based on stored keys and hashed values. NGSCB also requires secure channels between a keyboard and main memory and between a display interface and a graphics chip and its frame buffer.

Holding pattern

Microsoft has made no decisions about when it will put the new functionality into Windows while it waits on availability of many of the specially modified components it requires from companies such as Intel and AMD collaborating on the effort. “We are running many functions now in emulation,” said Stephen Heil, a security evangelist at Microsoft.

Microsoft has also not finalized decisions about how it will license the NGSCB technology and make it open for others to review. “Its an important series of decisions we need to make that will have broad importance for NGSCB and Microsoft. We are focusing on that now” said Mario Juarez, a group product manager for NGSCB at Microsoft.

“We've got a number of different licensing buckets. It's kind of like a Venn diagram,” added Heil.

Over the past six months, Microsoft has created a group of at least 100 developers working on NGSCB as part of a broad new security business unit at Microsoft under Mike Nash. “An awful lot of what has happened [in the last nine months] is just filling out the team into a fully functioning product group. There's been a lot of work spent hiring,” said Juarez.

Microsoft hopes its WinHEC presentations on security—as much as 18 hours of talks over three days—will end debates about whether the approach will work and begin the task of engaging a broader group of developers on the nuts and bolts of building it out, said Amy Carroll, a group product manager in the new security group.

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(1 reply) #1 pagal on 16 Apr 2003 - 10:26
alright...I really don't know if its true or not, but the sources makes me think. [QUOTE]Whitfield Diffie, a distinguished engineer at [B]SunMicrosystems Laboratories[/B][/QUOTE] I guess I'll have to wait until I hear the same thing from other sources than Sun, only because of their clashes with MS. p.s: I'm a java developer, so don't start bashing me.
#1.1 JaggedFlame on 16 Apr 2003 - 14:24
[QUOTE]p.s: I'm a java developer, so don't start bashing me.[/QUOTE] Watch out for Zatko... he bashes you even if you [i]are[/i] a Java developer.
#2 Tom Servo on 16 Apr 2003 - 10:38
[quote]Likewise Diffie said he was not aware of any specific alternative to NGSCB in the works at Sun.[/quote] As of now, Sun always countered with their own standards group each time MS made something. And good you point out that Diffie works for Sun, makes him not credible to me.
#3 redFX on 16 Apr 2003 - 14:31
He's also an MIT professor and founder of RSA Security. He has a point though... read the article.
#4 Trust on 17 Apr 2003 - 00:08
"The right way to look at this is you are putting a virtual set top box inside your PC. You are essentially renting out part of your PC to people you may not trust" I like that

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