6,045 research outputs found
Citizen Electronic Identities using TPM 2.0
Electronic Identification (eID) is becoming commonplace in several European
countries. eID is typically used to authenticate to government e-services, but
is also used for other services, such as public transit, e-banking, and
physical security access control. Typical eID tokens take the form of physical
smart cards, but successes in merging eID into phone operator SIM cards show
that eID tokens integrated into a personal device can offer better usability
compared to standalone tokens. At the same time, trusted hardware that enables
secure storage and isolated processing of sensitive data have become
commonplace both on PC platforms as well as mobile devices.
Some time ago, the Trusted Computing Group (TCG) released the version 2.0 of
the Trusted Platform Module (TPM) specification. We propose an eID architecture
based on the new, rich authorization model introduced in the TCGs TPM 2.0. The
goal of the design is to improve the overall security and usability compared to
traditional smart card-based solutions. We also provide, to the best our
knowledge, the first accessible description of the TPM 2.0 authorization model.Comment: This work is based on an earlier work: Citizen Electronic Identities
using TPM 2.0, to appear in the Proceedings of the 4th international workshop
on Trustworthy embedded devices, TrustED'14, November 3, 2014, Scottsdale,
Arizona, USA, http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2666141.266614
LO-FAT: Low-Overhead Control Flow ATtestation in Hardware
Attacks targeting software on embedded systems are becoming increasingly
prevalent. Remote attestation is a mechanism that allows establishing trust in
embedded devices. However, existing attestation schemes are either static and
cannot detect control-flow attacks, or require instrumentation of software
incurring high performance overheads. To overcome these limitations, we present
LO-FAT, the first practical hardware-based approach to control-flow
attestation. By leveraging existing processor hardware features and
commonly-used IP blocks, our approach enables efficient control-flow
attestation without requiring software instrumentation. We show that our
proof-of-concept implementation based on a RISC-V SoC incurs no processor
stalls and requires reasonable area overhead.Comment: Authors' pre-print version to appear in DAC 2017 proceeding
Trusted Computing using Enhanced Manycore Architectures with Cryptoprocessors
International audienceManycore architectures correspond to a main evolution of computing systems due to their high processing power. Many applications can be executed in parallel which provides users with a very efficient technology. Cloud computing is one of the many domains where manycore architectures will play a major role. Thus, building secure manycore architectures is a critical issue. However a trusted platform based on manycore architectures is not available yet. In this paper we discuss the main challenges and some possible solutions to enhance manycore architectures with cryptoprocessor
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