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Hardware Hacking

Hardware TPM Hacked 327

Posted by Soulskill
from the matter-of-time dept.
BiggerIsBetter writes "Christopher Tarnovsky has pulled off the 'near impossible' TPM hardware hack. We all knew it was only a matter of time; this is why you shouldn't entrust your data to proprietary solutions. From the article: 'The technique can also be used to tap text messages and email belonging to the user of a lost or stolen phone. Tarnovsky said he can't be sure, however, whether his attack would work on TPM chips made by companies other than Infineon. Infineon said it knew this type of attack was possible when it was testing its chips. But the company said independent tests determined that the hack would require such a high skill level that there was a limited chance of it affecting many users. ... The Trusted Computing Group, which sets standards on TPM chips, called the attack "exceedingly difficult to replicate in a real-world environment."'"
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Hardware TPM Hacked

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  • surprise surprise (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 09 2010, @12:46PM (#31073678)

    'near impossible'

    Shouldn't that be 'near inevitable'?

    Infineon said it knew this type of attack was possible when it was testing its chips.

    Did they mention this in their marketing and when selling the TPM FUD to governments and companies?

    "exceedingly difficult to replicate in a real-world environment."

    Meaning only powerful criminal organizations, companies and governments can probably gather the
    required resources and people with the expertise to pull it off? Out of 6.8 billion people, how
    many have the resources to do this? 1000? 10,000? What about in 5 years?
    At what point will they admit its flawed? Probably when TPM2 is fully patented and ready.

  • by santax (1541065) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @12:52PM (#31073802)
    That near impossible = possible = bad security. The arrogance to think they are soooo smart and (almost) no-one will be able to crack their design. Well it only takes 1 person. But I am guessing about every secret service in the world already knew how to do this attack.
  • by Admiralbumblebee (996792) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @12:54PM (#31073842) Homepage
    FTA "Using off-the-shelf chemicals, Tarnovsky soaked chips in acid to dissolve their hard outer shells. Then he applied rust remover to help take off layers of mesh wiring, to expose the chips' cores. From there, he had to find the right communication channels to tap into using a very small needle."

    If the attacker has this much physical access to your system/data then you've lost LONG before the TPM chip failed.
  • by Jeng (926980) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @01:05PM (#31074014)

    If the attacker has this much physical access to your system/data then you've lost LONG before the TPM chip failed.

    Yes, such as if the computer was stolen. I don't know much about TPM, but I would hazard a guess that one of the selling points would be to keep information secure even if the computer it is in gets stolen.

  • Re:"high-skill" (Score:5, Insightful)

    by PhilHibbs (4537) <snarks@gmail.com> on Tuesday February 09 2010, @01:06PM (#31074030) Homepage Journal

    Not sure what you mean. But yes, this does require a high skill level - we don't know how many TMP chips this guy trashed before getting it to work on one, or what his success rate would be on the next one. If he gets a laptop full of Chinese secrets and is asked to crack the TPM chip, he might well fry it on the first attempt, and you don't get second attempts on this kind of thing. It's not the kind of exploit that can be scripted and downloaded by any kiddie.

  • by noidentity (188756) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @01:06PM (#31074036)

    I don't really call any hack that requires "physical access" to be a genuine danger. If someone has physical access to your box you've got greater worries.

    Yes, but remember that TPM is about keeping you our of your own computer, so those who would like to do so are worried about this.

  • by sim82 (836928) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @01:16PM (#31074196)
    well, now that he knows which chemicals to use and which wires to tap, it should take considerably less than 6 months to do it again. Basically the security of this tpm seems to be mainly based on obscurity (in this case complicated hardware).
  • by mini me (132455) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @01:17PM (#31074214)

    The makers of the chip said that they knew of the problem. An open chip maker would also be aware of the problem, but they would make the problem known. This would allow people using the chip to determine of the pros outweigh the cons of the vulnerability .

  • While decapping chips is done all the time in failure analysis labs, it isn't easy, and it's even harder if you're trying not to damage the chip (or yourself) in the process.

    Decapping usually involves concentrated nitric and/or sulfuric acids. Temperature control is important. You want to carefully dissolve the plastic without destroying the lead frame and/or the bonding wires going from the lead frame to the die. You also want to complete this process without losing any fingers or your eyesight -- highly concentrated acids. Rinse carefully with deionized water and test to make sure the chip is still functional.

    Now you can feed the chip to your electron beam probe, FIB mill, or just take pretty pictures.

    Not the kind of thing you're going to do in your kitchen!
  • by Jeremy Erwin (2054) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @01:21PM (#31074282) Journal

    'near impossible'. Shouldn't that be 'near inevitable'?

    No. Consider a strongbox. The best strongboxes, or safes are rated to withstand X minutes of attacking with Y Tools, with the idea being that within those X minutes, the security guards or the police will have responded and arrested the guy patiently drilling holes in the wall. Even though safes have been successfully manipulated, drilled, pried, lanced, or detonated, manufacturers still design strongboxes to thwart burglars, changing locks, adding glass discs, experimenting with new alloys, new shapes, and so on. Inevitably, some thieves will figure out a way to thwart these safeguards, and design begins anew.

    It's not as if the burglars have won, and a burglary safes are a quaint anachronism.

    The TPM should give administrators time to disable credentials in the case of a stolen laptop. But "secret forever" was and probably shall ever remain a pipe dream.

  • Re:Difficult? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by jpmorgan (517966) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @01:22PM (#31074296) Homepage

    And you'd think posters would try reading the article before sounding smarmy and dismissing the abilities of others. Funny that.

    Given that the first step of the "attack" is physically dissolving the chip's outer packaging in an acid bath... I'm guessing this won't be showing up in script-kiddie toolchains any time soon.

  • by SiliconEntity (448450) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @01:26PM (#31074352)

    I've been reading about this hack for days, but something seems fishy. Some of the earlier reports [computerworld.com] had him hacking the SLE 66 CL processor chip which is embedded in the TPM, not the TPM itself. This article also describes him as having to work with many copies of the chip to discover its secrets, but it has the chips being inexpensive ones from China. Problem is that Infineon is a German company and I don't think you can get Infineon TPMs cheaply from China. Putting this together, it's not clear to me that he has truly hacked an Infineon TPM. He may have hacked a similar chip and he assumes that the same attack would work on TPM.

    However, there is a way for him to easily prove that he has done what he said. Every Infineon TPM comes with an RSA secret key embedded in it, called the Endorsement Key or EK. This key is designed to be kept secret and never revealed off-chip, not to the computer owner or anyone. And Infineon TPMs also come with an X.509 certificate on the public part of the EK (PUBEK), issued by Infineon. If Tarnovsky has really hacked an Infineon TPM and is able to extract keys, he should be able to extract and publish the private part of the EK (PRIVEK), along with the certificate by Infineon on that key. The mere publication of these two pieces of data (PRIVEK and Infineon-signed X.509 cert on PUBEK) will prove that his claim is true.

  • by SomeJoel (1061138) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @01:35PM (#31074460)

    Given that the first step in the hack is removing the chip and dissolving its outer casing in acid, I'm guessing this isn't likely to admit a purely software exploit.

    In other words, RTFA.

    What the GP was asking is that now that this has been broken once, does the data obtained from said break-in provide enough information to devise a software solution?

    For instance, if the data obtained indicated that passwords always resolve to a relatively small subset of hashes, then brute force attacks would have a much faster time of it. But hey, way to play the RTFA card without understanding the question.

  • by blackraven14250 (902843) * on Tuesday February 09 2010, @01:42PM (#31074568)
    You didn't answer the question. It was "Exactly how would this attack have been prevented". Nice sidestep, though.
  • by Opportunist (166417) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @01:43PM (#31074588)

    What part of it can be automatized? As soon as that is a possibility, it becomes trivial to execute for anyone.

    Cracking computer games with "professional" copy protection requires specialized knowledge as well, as well as a few key tools and the knowledge how to operate them. Yet it can be fully automatized once it has been done once and thus anyone can apply a crack. Cracking the protection of consoles requires a lot of knowledge and information, yet applying it requires a soldering iron and a chip (either bought or selfmade). How much of that TPM hack can be streamlined and dumbed down until all the potential attacker needs is a list of hardware to buy and some programs to run?

    And suddenly those 1000 multiply.

  • by zelbinion (442226) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @01:56PM (#31074800)

    Actually, most likely the keys stored inside the chip's non-volatile memory are probably encrypted, just to prevent that sort of attack.

    I worked with similar technology in a previous job. When Tarnovsky said "This chip is mean, man - it's like a ticking time bomb if you don't do something right,"

    My guess is he wasn’t kidding. These sorts of chips have all sorts of counter measures to make this sort of attack difficult. The algorithms built into the circuits on the chip are designed to make eavesdropping hard. You can send different commands to the chip, and ask it to decode different amounts of data, but it will intentionally insert randomness into the time and number of operations to do the work to prevent you from gleaning information about what is going on inside the chip. I’m sure there are circuits that do nothing other than generate spurious electrical impulses so that trying to sense what the chip is doing remotely won’t work. The only way to even attempt an attack like this is to do what Tarnovsky did, and strip off the packaging. Assuming you didn’t just destroy it, even then you aren’t home free. I’m sure there are other safe guards built into the chips. Oh, did the voltage drop just now across that one circuit? That’s probably an attack – the chip just deleted the keys you were trying to recover and is now useless. Did that operation take too long because someone hooked up their own custom circuit in an attempt to decode what was going on? Yeah, that’s out too bye bye secret keys Interrupt the power to the key storage area for a nanosecond while you try to connect your probe? I’m sorry, you’re done. Did you just read out the data out of the protected storage out of sequence? Well, not only is that data encrypted (and therefore useless), the chip detected it, and intentionally burned out a small inaccessible fuse buried inside the chip and bricked itself. You’re done. Did you just inject an internal command with your probe that wasn't expected? Yep, you just blew another fuse. Go home.

    You have to connect your probes in exactly the right place, in exactly the right way, and not disturb the electrical properties of the circuit you tapped into to prevent the chip from knowing that you are there and triggering a counter-measure.

    I don’t know which counter measures the TPM modules from Infineon implement, but if they are current with the sort of technology out there, this hack was really really super damn hard.

    Sure, with enough time, money, skill, patience, and physical access to the machine, anything can eventually be broken. The idea of the TPM was to make it expensive enough to hack that the average thief won’t bother. If you are relying on a TPM only to protect secrets on a mobile device (which can be stolen and then hacked by a well funded company or government) you either deserve what you got, or you’ve made way too many well funded and motivated enemies.

  • by chill (34294) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @02:07PM (#31074968) Journal

    This is called "tamper resistance" and is a common technique used in physical security. People who use this stuff professionally know this is how it works and factor it accordingly. No one with any competence in the field assumes the perfect security of a system. ALL systems are vulnerable depending on the time, money and effort expended to compromise them. Tamper resistance has the sole purpose of driving those factors up.

    See: Tamper Resistance [wikipedia.org]

    Most of the people who have information valuable enough to warrant this type of time-effort-money expenditure aren't relying solely on TPM for their security. Things like multi-factor authentication and independent encryption come into play as well.

  • by Gyorg_Lavode (520114) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @02:14PM (#31075090)
    I've listened to his talks before, and this is what he does. He's incredibly good at bypassing chip security and reading out the data on the chips. The question though is do you have to do that every time, or did he find a bug in the code on the chip that could potentially be exploited externally. The article is a bit vague on that. All it really sais is he was able to tap the chip bus. It doesn't comment on the impact of him doing so other than it compromises the whole chip.
  • by rochberg (1444791) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @02:26PM (#31075352)

    [...] remember that TPM is about keeping you our of your own computer[...]

    Um, no. TPMs are designed for three things: 1) establish a hardware root of trust for boot (i.e., make sure that you're actually booting your OS and not a rootkit first), 2) provide lightweight, secure and fast cryptographic operations (so you don't have to do something stupid like store a cryptographic key in plaintext on your HD), and 3) allow remote attestation of a computer's software stack (i.e., verifying the integrity of the OS and other pieces of software...very useful for distributed systems).

    Yes, there are applications of TPMs for DRM, but that is a side effect and not a primary factor. Furthermore, in the case of general purpose computers (which does not include gaming platforms like the Xbox), the TPM best practices make it very clear that the TPM should only be activated with the user's explicit knowledge and consent. I.e., it is the owner of the hardware who decides if the TPM will be used, not the software vendors. Of course, hardware vendors are not obliged to follow the best practices, but that's not the fault of TCG.

  • by IamTheRealMike (537420) <mike@plan99.net> on Tuesday February 09 2010, @02:27PM (#31075362)

    Gah. This whole conversation is retarded.

    1. The TPM is an open solution. The chips behavior is determined by open standards and there are multiple competing vendors of these chips.
    2. The fact that you can mount sophisticated silicon attacks on a TPM is not a "flaw" because nobody knows how to make completely impenetrable chips. The TPM does what it was designed to do - provide a good level of security for very low cost. If you lose your laptop and it uses a TPM based product, chances are really great that the thieves won't get data out of it. That is not the same thing as "completely invulnerable to SEMs" and nobody ever claimed it was.
  • Re:Obligatory XKCD (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Simetrical (1047518) <Simetrical+sd@gmail.com> on Tuesday February 09 2010, @02:47PM (#31075716) Homepage

    http://xkcd.com/538/ [xkcd.com]

    If the data is valuable enough to steal a computer and try to hack the TPM chip using acid and needles, then it's valuable enough to threaten the person with the password to divulge it.

    Do you think China would be willing to steal a laptop with US state secrets on it? Definitely. Would they be willing to kidnap and torture the military officer or NSA employee who knows the password? Not a chance – that's an act of war.

    (And no one but a foreign government would put this much effort into retrieving data from a computer. Anything short of state secrets is not worth the effort.)

  • Wait a minute... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 09 2010, @02:49PM (#31075746)

    Why don't you have him just sign something with that public key signature rather than divulging the private key to the world?

    Perhaps a signed copy of the Gutenberg Press release of Aesop's fables???

        The Eagle and the Arrow

    An Eagle was soaring through the air when suddenly it heard
    the whizz of an Arrow, and felt itself wounded to death. Slowly
    it fluttered down to the earth, with its life-blood pouring out of
    it. Looking down upon the Arrow with which it had been pierced,
    it found that the shaft of the Arrow had been feathered with one
    of its own plumes. "Alas!" it cried, as it died,

    "We often give our enemies the means for our own destruction."

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 09 2010, @03:04PM (#31076034)

    No, you fucking fail. You're just too much a pussy to admit it, so you're trying to cover up your arrogant bullshit with this garbage. Kill yourself.

  • HEY TARNOVSKY (Score:3, Insightful)

    by TrisexualPuppy (976893) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @03:05PM (#31076056)
    I have been researching on this hack for hours upon hours, and something just doesn't add up. Earlier reports were of him cracking the SLE 66 CL which is embedded in the TPM but is NOT the TPM itself. The chips he has been using are cheap ones from China. The issue at hand is that Infineon is a German company, just a little different from your run-of-the-mill Chinese company. When you sum these things up, you can't really surmise that he has in fact cracked the Infineon TPM. So what if he has hacked a similar chip? You can't just go around saying that you have cracked a top-of-the-line Infineon. Every chip is NOT created equally.

    On the flip side, there is an easy way for him to prove me wrong. Every Infineon TPM comes with an Endorsement Key, basically an RSA secret key. The purpose of this key is that it should be kept secret and never realized off the chip, not to software, not to any other board component. Infineon TPMs come with X.509 certificates issued by Infineon. If Tarnovsky has truly hacked this one out, he should be able to extract and publish the private part of the Endorsement Key along with Infineon's certificate on that key. All that he has to do is show that he has these TWO pieces of data.

    But is he up for it?
  • by dzfoo (772245) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @03:10PM (#31076144)

    Security: http://xkcd.com/538/ [xkcd.com]

            -dZ.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday February 09 2010, @03:45PM (#31076668)

    This is not what the TPM is about... you've clearly swallowed the FUD entirely. The TPM has the potential to help you boot into a known safe state. If that boot state is evil (pick your favorite evil vendor), then yes, you're screwed. Otherwise, the chip just isn't the boogey-man you clearly want it to be.

  • by Zerth (26112) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @04:18PM (#31077206) Homepage

    And after he does it a second time and realizes, for example, the first half of the keys are identical or the odd and even bits fulfill a certain function, then a brute force software solution becomes trivial.

  • what the hell? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by RJBeery (956252) <rjbeery @ g m ail.com> on Tuesday February 09 2010, @05:13PM (#31077980)
    This looks like TriSexualPuppy and SiliconEntity enjoying a game of MadLibs...

    http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1543104&cid=31076056 [slashdot.org]

    I have been researching on this hack for hours upon hours, and something just doesn't add up. Earlier reports were of him cracking the SLE 66 CL which is embedded in the TPM but is NOT the TPM itself. The chips he has been using are cheap ones from China. The issue at hand is that Infineon is a German company, just a little different from your run-of-the-mill Chinese company. When you sum these things up, you can't really surmise that he has in fact cracked the Infineon TPM. So what if he has hacked a similar chip? You can't just go around saying that you have cracked a top-of-the-line Infineon. Every chip is NOT created equally. On the flip side, there is an easy way for him to prove me wrong. Every Infineon TPM comes with an Endorsement Key, basically an RSA secret key. The purpose of this key is that it should be kept secret and never realized off the chip, not to software, not to any other board component. Infineon TPMs come with X.509 certificates issued by Infineon. If Tarnovsky has truly hacked this one out, he should be able to extract and publish the private part of the Endorsement Key along with Infineon's certificate on that key. All that he has to do is show that he has these TWO pieces of data. But is he up for it?

    VS

    http://hardware.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1543104&cid=31077696 [slashdot.org]

    I've been reading about this hack for days, but something seems fishy. Some of the earlier reports [computerworld.com] had him hacking the SLE 66 CL processor chip which is embedded in the TPM, not the TPM itself. This article also describes him as having to work with many copies of the chip to discover its secrets, but it has the chips being inexpensive ones from China. Problem is that Infineon is a German company and I don't think you can get Infineon TPMs cheaply from China. Putting this together, it's not clear to me that he has truly hacked an Infineon TPM. He may have hacked a similar chip and he assumes that the same attack would work on TPM. However, there is a way for him to easily prove that he has done what he said. Every Infineon TPM comes with an RSA secret key embedded in it, called the Endorsement Key or EK. This key is designed to be kept secret and never revealed off-chip, not to the computer owner or anyone. And Infineon TPMs also come with an X.509 certificate on the public part of the EK (PUBEK), issued by Infineon. If Tarnovsky has really hacked an Infineon TPM and is able to extract keys, he should be able to extract and publish the private part of the EK (PRIVEK), along with the certificate by Infineon on that key. The mere publication of these two pieces of data (PRIVEK and Infineon-signed X.509 cert on PUBEK) will prove that his claim is true.

    $100 says that this is damage control from Infineon by challenging Tarnovsky to something that they know, for whatever reason, he is unable to accomplish?

  • by SiliconEntity (448450) on Tuesday February 09 2010, @05:44PM (#31078498)

    Why don't you have him just sign something with that public key signature rather than divulging the private key to the world?

    You're right, that's a better idea. He can sign something with the EK rather than publishing the private key. It accomplishes the same thing but maybe causes less disruption to the TPM world.

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