Lenovo Installed Software On Laptops That Persisted After Complete Wipes
An anonymous reader writes: The Next Web has confirmed reports from owners of Lenovo laptops that the company used a BIOS feature to install its software on the laptops even if a user wiped a device clean and reinstalled the operating system. "If Windows 7 or 8 is installed, the BIOS of the laptop checks 'C:\Windows\system32\autochk.exe' to see if it's a Microsoft file or a Lenovo-signed one, then overwrites the file with its own. Then, when the modified autochk file is executed on boot, another two files LenovoUpdate.exe and LenovoCheck.exe are created, which set up a service and download files when connected to the internet." Lenovo has published a patch to remove this functionality. The article notes that this technique seems to be sanctioned by a Microsoft policy. "Manufacturers are obligated to ensure that the mechanism can be updated if an attack is discovered and should be removable by the user, but the rules outlined in the document are fairly loose and don't require the OEM to notify the owner of the laptop that such a mechanism is in place."
This is actually a mechanism called Windows Platform Binary Table (WPBT).
More information can be found in the Microsoft WPBT whitepaper:
"This paper describes the format of a Windows Platform Binary Table (WPBT). The WPBT is a fixed Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) table that enables boot firmware to provide Windows with a platform binary that the operating system can execute. The binary handoff medium is physical memory, allowing the boot firmware to provide the platform binary without modifying the Windows image on disk. In the initial version, the WPBT simply contains a physical address pointer to a flat, Portable Executable (PE) image that has been copied to physical memory. The WPBT is extensible, allowing the layout of published platform binaries to be more complex in future versions and allowing the support of more than one binary type.
It is expected that the binary pointed to by the WPBT is part of the boot firmware ROM image. The binary can be shadowed to physical memory as part of the initial bootstrap of the boot firmware, or it can be loaded into physical memory by extensible boot firmware code prior to executing any operating system code. A boot firmware component would create the WPBT based on the location of the platform binary. During operating system initialization, Windows will read the WPBT to obtain the physical memory location of the platform binary. In the first version, the binary is required to be a native, user-mode application that is executed by the Windows Session Manager during operating system initialization. Windows will write the flat image to disk, and the Session Manager will launch the process. Windows may reclaim the physical memory described in the WPBT.
If Windows observes a WPBT during operating system initialization, it will attempt to use an ACPI control method to communicate binary execution status back to the platform."
Yep My Thinkpad X250 has this and there is a bios update to fix it.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.