A group of Princeton researchers have found attacks rendering many popular whole-disk encryption mechanisms useless. It’s pretty interesting stuff although one has to question the methodology of removing a stick of ram from a computer. What was “more nifty” was the attack shown in the later half of the video that required nothing more than a thumb drive or the like to grab the BitLocker key on a Vista machine (they said similar methods could break the others as well). I suppose the moral of this story is keep tabs on your laptop, even if you do use something like FileVault or BitLocker. Really though, it’s not like your average laptop thief is going to have sophisticated software like the stuff demonstrated in the video.
Tags
Ambackup amchat Amromobile another iphone wanna-be appcelerator Apple Backup BBS billminder Buyout Camry Car castcatcher Customer service Danger Development Easteregg engadget Freeware garmin Good Egg Studios Google ie iPhone iphone sdk javascript mac os x Microsoft Microsoft Phone Nuvi nuviphone objective-c phone Programming Radio Javan return7 Shoutcast site5 software startup Stream svn tips UMPC Yahoo!
What I'm up to
-
- nail in tire now patched. bumper cracked. >.< about 4 minutes ago from TweetDeck
- working around some odd squeezecenter playback behavior about 13 hours ago from TweetDeck
- In traffic and tire pressure sensor on. This week rocks. about 16 hours ago from Twinkle
How I Roll