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E-crime and Hacking

Vista will safeguard HD disposal, says Microsoft

Encryption tech is "100 per cent secure"...

By Tom Espiner

Published: 26 April 2006 12:00 BST

Microsoft claims businesses planning to use Vista together with its Bitlocker hard drive encryption technology will have an easy and safe way to dispose of their hard disks.

The software giant said on Tuesday Vista will be so secure businesses will no longer need to worry about data being compromised when sending hard disks to be disposed of, in line with upcoming 'green' legislation designed to reduce waste.

Nick McGrath, head of platform strategy for Microsoft UK at Infosecurity 2006, said: "With Vista and Bitlocker, businesses will be able to throw hard disks away and be sure [they are] secure."

However, McGrath rejected suggestions Bitlocker would have backdoors in its encryption that will allow police forces to decrypt information stored on suspect systems.

He said: "The technology itself is 100 per cent secure - we will not be producing any backdoors. There are no backdoors in Bitlocker technology."

Bitlocker encryption uses a Trusted Platform Module, a chip that sits on the motherboard and contains an encryption key. According to Microsoft technical security advisor Steve Lamb, the key both encrypts and decrypts data on the hard disk using the Advanced Encryption Standard, which is also used by the US government.

Microsoft denied the encryption technology would enable criminals to store data so securely that it would be out of reach of the police.

Lamb said: "You can always break an encryption algorithm if you throw enough horsepower at it." The security advisor admitted businesses could be at risk from hackers breaking the encryption but said the amount of power needed to do that was usually only available to governments.

Choosing disposal methods for encrypted hard disks would be a policy-based decision, Lamb said.

He said: "Using Bitlocker dramatically reduces the risk to data. I don't want to teach anyone to suck eggs but you've got to ask 'What's my appetite for risk?', and apply the appropriate constraints. Some enterprises may decide it's a low risk, while in a military environment they may decide to smash the TPM to pieces."

A MessageLabs security expert said in theory criminals can encrypt data and communicate with a fair degree of assurance using Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) encryption.

Mark Sunner, chief technical officer at mail services company MessageLabs, said: "You can do an awful lot with PGP. You can encrypt things in a way that governments would find difficult to decrypt."

Criminals were unlikely to use hard disks to store information but in theory gangs could use the internet to host encrypted information.

Sunner said: "It's an interesting argument - because of the internet 'bad-guy rings' can use these techniques to send information around."

He added: "Another use for a botnet is for hosting information, and it's constantly moving, making it difficult to intercept. Abuse of technology takes on a completely different meaning."

Tom Espiner writes for ZDNet UK

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