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Files from Ross Anderson

Email addressross.anderson at cl.cam.ac.uk
First Active2012-09-12
Last Active2015-07-09
Keys Under Doormats
Posted Jul 9, 2015
Authored by Bruce Schneier, Josh Benaloh, Ross Anderson, John Gilmore, Daniel J. Weitzner, Susan Landau, Ronald L. Rivest, Harold Abelson, Matthew Blaze, Jeffrey I. Schiller, Matthew Green, Michael Specter, Steven M. Bellovin, Peter G. Neumann, Whitfield Diffie

Whitepaper called Keys Under Doormats: Mandating insecurity by requiring government access to all data and communications. Twenty years ago, law enforcement organizations lobbied to require data and communication services to engineer their products to guarantee law enforcement access to all data. After lengthy debate and vigorous predictions of enforcement channels "going dark," these attempts to regulate the emerging Internet were abandoned. In the intervening years, innovation on the Internet flourished, and law enforcement agencies found new and more effective means of accessing vastly larger quantities of data. Today we are again hearing calls for regulation to mandate the provision of exceptional access mechanisms. In this report, a group of computer scientists and security experts, many of whom participated in a 1997 study of these same topics, has convened to explore the likely effects of imposing extraordinary access mandates. They have found that the damage that could be caused by law enforcement exceptional access requirements would be even greater today than it would have been 20 years ago. In the wake of the growing economic and social cost of the fundamental insecurity of today's Internet environment, any proposals that alter the security dynamics online should be approached with caution. Exceptional access would force Internet system developers to reverse "forward secrecy" design practices that seek to minimize the impact on user privacy when systems are breached. The complexity of today's Internet environment, with millions of apps and globally connected services, means that new law enforcement requirements are likely to introduce unanticipated, hard to detect security flaws. Beyond these and other technical vulnerabilities, the prospect of globally deployed exceptional access systems raises difficult problems about how such an environment would be governed and how to ensure that such systems would respect human rights and the rule of law.

tags | paper, vulnerability
SHA-256 | b2cf2c1b7f4eb18e903bb934869b5489e8ecd5215e90c29f1411031756900e31
Chip And Skim: Cloning EMV Cards With The Pre-Play Attack
Posted Sep 12, 2012
Authored by Steven J. Murdoch, Mike Bond, Sergei Skorobogatov, Ross Anderson, Omar Choudary

EMV, also known as "Chip and PIN", is the leading system for card payments world- wide. It is used throughout Europe and much of Asia, and is starting to be introduced in North America too. Payment cards contain a chip so they can execute an authentication protocol. This protocol requires point-of-sale (POS) terminals or ATMs to generate a nonce, called the unpredictable number, for each transaction to ensure it is fresh. The authors have discovered that some EMV implementers have merely used counters, timestamps or home-grown algorithms to supply this number. This exposes them to a "pre-play" attack which is indistinguishable from card cloning from the standpoint of the logs available to the card-issuing bank, and can be carried out even if it is impossible to clone a card physically (in the sense of extracting the key material and loading it into another card).

tags | paper, protocol
SHA-256 | f84ee2e08154a6b99c6a080b531ba266efec1a3a793f9705959e779bb106cd3e
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