Controversial Security Paper Nixed From Black Hat
coondoggie writes us with a link to the Network World site, as he tends to do. Today he offers an article discussing the cancellation of a presentation which would have undermined chip-based security on PCs. Scheduled during the Black Hat USA 2007 event, the event's briefing promised to break the Trusted Computing Group's module, as well as Vista's Bitlocker. Live demos were to be included. The presenters pulled the event, and have no interest in discussing the subject any more. "[Presenters Nitin and Vipin Kumar's] promised exploit would be a chink in the armor of hardware-based system integrity that [trusted platform module] (TPM) is designed to ensure. TPM is also a key component of Trusted Computing Group's architecture for network access control (NAC). TPM would create a unique value or hash of all the steps of a computer's boot sequence that would represent the particular state of that machine, according to Steve Hanna, co-chair of TCG's NAC effort."
So, did they pull because they had a problem with the demos at the last minute, or is there a more sinister conspiracy-type explanation for this retraction?
This game will waste your life. Don't clicky!
(emphasis mine.) Interesting. First time for such meta-commentary by a slashdot editor? I don't think we ever saw the same for one of Roland Piquepaille's many submissions...
The Online Slang Dictionary
This can be done with VBootkit as well. Let's resurrect the BIOS viruses. Note that Nitin and Vipin Kumar are the authors of VBootkit and it was covered previously on Slahdot here: VBootkit Bypasses Vista's Code Signing.
"The demonstration would include a few live demonstrations. For example, one demonstration will show how to login and access data on a Windows Vista System (which has TPM + BitLocker enabled)," the abstract said.
If they were able to do that, most likely they had what they said they had. I'm betting they were threatened with a lawsuit or a criminal complaint.
YOu would need to put 3 more zeros on that to shut me up, minimum.
Because when it gets found out, I would not be trusted in the future.
The Kruger Dunning explains most post on