Fingerprint-Protected USB Sticks Cracked
juct writes "Manufacturers of USB sticks and cards with fingerprint readers promise us that their data safes can only be opened with the right fingerprint. In their tests, heise Security found that it is easy to bypass the authentication and get access to the protected data. This works by sending a single USB command, using the open source tool PLscsi, that changes the accessible partition. They found the vulnerability in several USB sticks that use the same chipset. The article concludes: 'The fingerprint sensors in the products mentioned above apparently only serve one purpose: they mislead interested buyers. They do not provide any significant level of protection. We can only recommend that these products not be purchased.'"
I've never seen a fingerprint system that was worth a damn...I was doing consulting at a company a few years back that had the "pad style" thumb readers (rather than the little scanners that are more popular now), and I "hacked" one of them for the company director by taking a deep breath and breathing on it. Warm breath condenses on the previous fingerprint and heats up the temperature sensor, and voila.
Now I had garlic pizza for lunch, so there is more than one reason that would have worked, but the fact that it did work was more than enough to convince me of the worthlessness of the tech. They had a Mythbusters episode a while back where they were fooling fingerprint readers with xeroxes and rubber casts; again, a huge glaring flaw.
At this point, security is still about passwords. I haven't seen any consumer grade biometric I'd trust with my MySpace profile (if I ever make one), more less anything sensitive.
ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
"They do not provide any significant level of protection. We can only recommend that these products not be purchased."
You seldom get such unflinching prose in a review.
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."
And my boss has been pushing to get these deployed at our company, for the sake of security. I'm sending him this article right now.
Thanks once again, Slashdot, for making it possible for me to project the impression that I'm doing my job. ^_^
____
~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey
Didn't Mythbusters beat a bunch of fingerprint readers a couple of seasons ago? I seem to recall them using printed pictures of fingerprints with great success.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oXyFmieZjiE
This is not the first USB-stick sold for a high price (typically 10 times the price of a normal USB stick of the same size) that doesn't actually add any security whatsoever.
Here is an article by a dutch website (the article is in english though) that does a thorough job (technical details included) of debunking a similar product.
Meanwhile, the scary thing is that government and military organizations are reported to have been actually using such products...
Every expression is true, for a given value of 'true'
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Corsair's Flash Padlock has the same issue. You can open the case through a single screw in the back of the drive and then access an electronic switch on the board, which can be easily tripped with a piece of wire, giving you access to the memory chip without having to punch in a security PIN. Hardware security methods just aren't as secure as software-based encryption.
But it is misleading. It offers a technology that, to the viewer, is designed to protect the content on the memory. It does nothing of the sort. It gives the facade of a deadbolted door, with a window around back that is just left open. You say it's quicker than inputting a password? I doubt people are really in that much of a hurry that 2 seconds is such a waste of time. If anything it would serve as not needing to remember a password, or multiple passwords. But I'm still wary of anything that will require any sort of biometric information of mine for me to access.
Absolute power corrupts absolutely. indymedia
It goes without saying that there are a large number of low-end sensors disguised as excellent front-ends to biometric authentication. You need to segregate two things.
1. the sensor itself.
2. the implementation of the sensor. (e.g. sensor as a front end)
There are two legitimate sensor manufacturers in the U.S. and one very well-known French company all of whom do not sell to just anyone anywhere and at prices absolutely out of range for a TV show and the average company.
Another thing to keep in mind is even IF there was budget for a good device, (oh to dream) there are implementation issues that can make the hardware worthless. As is often the case, meaningful implementations tend to complicate practically all business/operations matters which is why no company bothers.
To generalize that all fingerprint scanners suck is just wrong.
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
One of my favorite Login security systems I have used was when I had to access a secure system back in the early 90's. one of the login validations was the date and time you last logged in.
Username:
Password:
Last login date:
Last Login time:
Today's PIN:
Worked good but kept a LOT of people out as they could never remember when they last logged in I was one of few that never called the help desk as I simply scheduled my login times to be the same each day.
Today's pin was not so safe as it was written on the whiteboard in the security office.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
When will fingerprint "security" die?
Obligatory links:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2002/05/16/gummi_bears_defeat_fingerprint_sensors/
http://www.schneier.com/crypto-gram-9808.html#biometrics
It's important to understand that your fingerprints aren't secrets. You put them on thousands of objects every day. You can't create any security based on fingerprints unless you can assure that the reading device isn't tampered with. By placing a guard (a person) there or something.
)9TSS
Eh, the poor guy probably just had to put up with some password policy that says he has to have at least one non-letter character in the password.
A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.