The Asian Age

All laptops are vulnerable to data theft: Report

Experts say current security measures are not enough to protect data in laptops which are either lost or abducted

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Consultant­s from cyber security provider FSecure have discovered a weakness in modern computers that attackers can use to steal encryption keys and other sensitive informatio­n. The discovery has compelled the researcher­s to warn PC vendors and users that current security measures aren’t enough to protect data in lost or stolen laptops.

Attackers need physical access to the computer before they can exploit the weakness. But FSecure Principal Security Consultant Olle Segerdahl says once achieved, an adversary can successful­ly perform the attack in about 5 minutes.

“Typically, organisati­ons aren’t prepared to protect themselves from an attacker that has physical possession of a company computer. And when you have a security issue found in devices from major PC vendors, like the weakness my team has learned to exploit, you need to assume that a lot of companies have a weak link in their security that they’re not fully aware of or prepared to deal with,” said Segerdahl.

The weakness allows attackers with physical access to a computer to perform a cold boot attack - an attack that’s been known to hackers since 2008. Cold boot attacks involve rebooting a computer without following a proper shutdown process, then recovering data that remains briefly accessible in the RAM after the power is lost.

Modern laptops now overwrite RAM specifical­ly to prevent attackers from using cold boot attacks to steal data. However, Segerdahl and his team discovered a way to disable the overwrite process and re- enable the decade- old cold boot attack.

“It takes some extra steps compared to the classic cold boot attack, but it’s effective against all the modern laptops they’ve tested. And since this type of threat is primarily relevant in scenarios where devices are stolen or illicitly obtained, it’s the kind of thing an attacker will have plenty of time to execute,” explained Segerdahl.

The attack exploits the fact that the firmware settings governing the behaviour of the boot process are not protected against manipulati­on by a physical attacker. Using a simple hardware tool, an attacker can rewrite the non- volatile memory chip that contains these settings, disable memory overwritin­g, and enable booting from external devices. The cold boot attack can then be carried out by booting a special program off a USB stick.

“Because this attack works against the kind of laptops used by companies there’s no reliable way for organisati­ons to know their data is safe if a computer goes missing. And since 99 per cent of company laptops will contain things like access credential­s for corporate networks, it gives attackers a consistent, reliable way to compromise corporate targets,” said Segerdahl. “There’s no easy fix for this issue either, so it’s a risk that companies are going to have to address on their own.”

Segerdahl has shared his team’s research with Intel, Microsoft and Apple to help the PC industry improve the security of current and future products. Because Segerdahl doesn’t expect an immediate fix from the industry anytime soon, he recommends companies prepare themselves for these attacks. One way is to configure laptops to automatica­lly shut down/ hibernate instead of entering sleep mode and require users to enter the BitLocker PIN anytime Windows boots up or restores. Educating workers, especially executives and employees who travel, about cold boot attacks and similar threats, is also important. And IT department­s should have an incident response plan ready to deal with laptops that go missing.

“A quick response that invalidate­s access credential­s will make stolen laptops less valuable to attackers. IT security and incident response teams should rehearse this scenario and make sure that the company’s workforce knows to notify IT immediatel­y if a device is lost or stolen,” says Segerdahl. “Planning for these events is a better practice than assuming devices cannot be physically compromise­d by hackers because that’s obviously not the case.”

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