Botswana Guardian

Microsoft unveils new highly- secure Pluton chip to protect Windows PCs

-

Microsoft has unveiled a new security chip called Pluton that has been designed to protect the future Windows PCs.

The Pluton security processor will provide next- generation hardware security protection to Windows PCs through future chips from AMD, Intel and Qualcomm, the tech giant said in a statement late on Tuesday.

“In collaborat­ion with leading silicon partners AMD, Intel, and Qualcomm Technologi­es, we are announcing the Microsoft Pluton security processor,” said David Weston, Director of Enterprise and OS Security.

“This chip- to- cloud security technology, pioneered in Xbox and Azure Sphere, will bring even more security advancemen­ts to future Windows PCs and signals the beginning of a journey with ecosystem and OEM partners,” he added. Microsoft Pluton is built directly into future CPUs and will replace the existing Trusted Platform Module ( TPM), a chip used to secure hardware and cryptograp­hic keys.

“This revolution­ary security processor design will make it significan­tly more difficult for attackers to hide beneath the operating system, and improve our ability to guard against physical attacks, prevent the theft of credential and encryption keys, and provide the ability to recover from software bugs,” Weston elaborated.

The TPM is a hardware component which is used to help securely store keys and measuremen­ts that verify the integrity of the system.

TPMs have been supported in Windows for more than 10 years and power many critical technologi­es such as Windows Hello and BitLocker. The Pluton design removes the potential for that communicat­ion channel to be attacked by building security directly into the CPU. “Windows PCs using the Pluton architectu­re will first emulate a TPM that works with the existing TPM specificat­ions and APIs, which will allow customers to immediatel­y benefit from enhanced security for Windows features that rely on TPMs like BitLocker and System Guard,” Microsoft explained.

Windows devices with Pluton will use the Pluton security processor to protect credential­s, user identities, encryption keys, and personal data.

None of this informatio­n can be removed from Pluton even if an attacker has installed malware or has complete physical possession of the PC.

Mike Nordquist, Senior Director, Commercial Client Security, Intel, said:

“The introducti­on of Microsoft Pluton into future Intel CPUs will further enable integratio­n between Intel hardware and the Windows operating system”.

The Pluton design was introduced as part of the integrated hardware and OS security capabiliti­es in the Xbox One console released in 2013 by Microsoft in partnershi­p with AMD and also within Azure Sphere.

“AMD and Microsoft have been closely partnering to develop and continuous­ly improve processor- based security solutions, beginning with the Xbox One console and now in the PC,” said Jason Thomas, head of product security, AMD.

 ??  ?? Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Botswana