Just in case you thought Windows was secure...

Apr 29, 2008 14:03


It isn't (Seattle Times)

Microsoft has developed a small plug-in device that investigators can use to quickly extract forensic data from computers that may have been used in crimes.

The COFEE, which stands for Computer Online Forensic Evidence Extractor ( Read more... )

security, m$, stupidity

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Comments 12

technoshaman April 29 2008, 21:24:01 UTC
You know, that acronym is just too ironic. And re-proves the point that your computer is, barring other measures usually involving various applications of encryption, only as secure as its physical access....

But, yeah. Part of the security of Linux is that there are about a bazillion different ways to do things, and no one tool can 0wnz3r them all... it's security by obscurity, but it *does* slow the bad guys down, if not give them a nice flat spot on their foreheads.

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thnidu April 29 2008, 22:07:45 UTC
Oh. By "upgrade" you meant "not Windows". Ha ha.

I don't love Windows at all, but I hate RSI more, and my speech recognition software only runs under Windows.

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mdlbear April 30 2008, 01:31:52 UTC
Sorry to hear it. That's one of the places where Linux is still lagging. Complain to the vendor; if enough people ask for it they might listen.

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thnidu April 30 2008, 02:23:51 UTC
Not Nuance. When (then called ScanSoft) they bought the Dragon Systems products, code, and data, the CEO bragged to us staff about how tightfisted they were. They took on the engineering and sales departments but didn't figure they needed researchers. I was Chief Linguist.

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mdlbear April 30 2008, 03:54:12 UTC
Pity. The world needs good open source speech recognition software; it may be years before we get it.

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randwolf April 29 2008, 23:11:53 UTC
In other words, every Windows computer is at risk by design. Oh, wow.

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randwolf April 29 2008, 23:14:28 UTC
To which I will add, to spell it out: these devices are not going to stay in the hands of police agencies; criminals and terrorists will have them, probably already do have them. I devoutly hope this is a false rumor. (It is the Seattle Times; we may hope.)

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mdlbear April 29 2008, 23:49:11 UTC
Almost certainly have them by now.

I _would_ like to see some independent confirmation, though.

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mdlbear April 29 2008, 23:56:03 UTC
Should have looked first. Is this a sufficiently authoritative source for you?

http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/features/2008/apr08/04-28CrantonQA.mspx

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slothman April 29 2008, 23:46:57 UTC
Now I want to get my hands on one of these and write a detector that automatically pops up a copy of the Fourth Amendment when one of these gets stuck in a Linux machine.

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mdlbear April 29 2008, 23:52:29 UTC
Heh! Probably wouldn't be hard to do with hotplug or whatever replaced it (udev? Probably).

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mdlbear April 30 2008, 00:00:26 UTC
Wonder what they're selling for on the black market...

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