New Software Secures Data when Owners Walk Away
Makarand writes "Leave an operating laptop unattended on your desk and your sensitive data
is accessible to anyone who gets hold of it. To limit this risk many users
configure their systems to fall into a "sleep" mode after a period of inactivity
and ask for a password before the system can be awakened. This constant re-authentication
proves to be a headache for many users. Now a Professor and his
graduate student at at the University of Michigan have come up with a system
called
Zero-Interaction Authentication (ZIA),
described in this article in The Age,
to protect data on mobile devices.
The system works by starting to encrypt data
the moment the owner walks away from the system. The owners wear a token with
a encrypted wireless link with the laptop. If the token moves out of range the ZIA
re-encrypts all data within 5 seconds.
If the cryptographic token moves within range the system decrypts the information for the
owner.
The token, which could take many forms, is currently a wristwatch with a processor
running Linux designed by IBM."
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