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Thread started 08/04/05 6:15pm

BananaCologne

The future of computing: 'trusted computing'

This is pretty scary stuff.

Here's some basics, a link to the entire document is at the foot of this post.

What does Trusted Computing do, in ordinary English?

TC provides a computing platform on which you can't tamper with the application software, and where these applications can communicate securely with their authors and with each other. The original motivation was digital rights management (DRM): Disney will be able to sell you DVDs that will decrypt and run on a TC platform, but which you won't be able to copy. The music industry will be able to sell you music downloads that you won't be able to swap. They will be able to sell you CDs that you'll only be able to play three times, or only on your birthday. All sorts of new marketing possibilities will open up.

TC will also make it much harder for you to run unlicensed software. In the first version of TC, pirate software could be detected and deleted remotely. Since then, Microsoft has sometimes denied that it intended TC to do this, but at WEIS 2003 a senior Microsoft manager refused to deny that fighting piracy was a goal: `Helping people to run stolen software just isn't our aim in life', he said. The mechanisms now proposed are more subtle, though. TC will protect application software registration mechanisms, so that unlicensed software will be locked out of the new ecology. Furthermore, TC apps will work better with other TC apps, so people will get less value from old non-TC apps (including pirate apps). Also, some TC apps may reject data from old apps whose serial numbers have been blacklisted. If Microsoft believes that your copy of Office is a pirate copy, and your local government moves to TC, then the documents you file with them may be unreadable. TC will also make it easier for people to rent software rather than buy it; and if you stop paying the rent, then not only does the software stop working but so may the files it created. So if you stop paying for upgrades to Media Player, you may lose access to all the songs you bought using it.

For years, Bill Gates has dreamed of finding a way to make the Chinese pay for software: TC looks like being the answer to his prayer.

There are many other possibilities. Governments will be able to arrange things so that all Word documents created on civil servants' PCs are `born classified' and can't be leaked electronically to journalists. Auction sites might insist that you use trusted proxy software for bidding, so that you can't bid tactically at the auction. Cheating at computer games could be made more difficult.

There are some gotchas too. For example, TC can support remote censorship. In its simplest form, applications may be designed to delete pirated music under remote control. For example, if a protected song is extracted from a hacked TC platform and made available on the web as an MP3 file, then TC-compliant media player software may detect it using a watermark, report it, and be instructed remotely to delete it (as well as all other material that came through that platform). This business model, called traitor tracing, has been researched extensively by Microsoft (and others). In general, digital objects created using TC systems remain under the control of their creators, rather than under the control of the person who owns the machine on which they happen to be stored (as at present). So someone who writes a paper that a court decides is defamatory can be compelled to censor it - and the software company that wrote the word processor could be ordered to do the deletion if she refuses. Given such possibilities, we can expect TC to be used to suppress everything from pornography to writings that criticise political leaders.

The gotcha for businesses is that your software suppliers can make it much harder for you to switch to their competitors' products. At a simple level, Word could encrypt all your documents using keys that only Microsoft products have access to; this would mean that you could only read them using Microsoft products, not with any competing word processor. Such blatant lock-in might be prohibited by the competition authorities, but there are subtler lock-in strategies that are much harder to regulate.

So I won't be able to play MP3s on my computer any more?

With existing MP3s, you may be all right for some time. Microsoft says that TC won't make anything suddenly stop working. But a recent software update for Windows Media Player has caused controversy by insisting that users agree to future anti-piracy measures, which may include measures that delete pirated content found on your computer. Also, some programs that give people more control over their PCs, such as VMware and Total Recorder, are not going to work properly under TC. So you may have to use a different player - and if your player will play pirate MP3s, then it may not be authorised to play the new, protected, titles.

It is up to an application to set the security policy for its files, using an online policy server. So Media Player will determine what sort of conditions get attached to protected titles. I expect Microsoft will do all sorts of deals with the content providers, who will experiment with all sorts of business models. You might get CDs that are a third of the price but which you can only play three times; if you pay the other two-thirds, you'd get full rights. You might be allowed to lend your copy of some digital music to a friend, but then your own backup copy won't be playable until your friend gives you the main copy back. More likely, you'll not be able to lend music at all. Creeping digital lockdown will make life inconvenient in many niggling ways; for example, regional coding might stop you watching the Polish version of a movie if your PC was bought outside Europe.

This could all be done today - Microsoft would just have to download a patch into your player - but once TC makes it hard for people to tamper with the player software, and easy for Microsoft and the music industry to control what players will work at all with new releases, it will be harder for you to escape. Control of media player software is so important that the EU antitrust authorities are proposing to penalise Microsoft for its anticompetitive behaviour by compelling it to unbundle Media Player, or include competing players in Windows. TC will greatly increase the depth and scope of media control.

Trusted Computing FAQ
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Reply #1 posted 08/04/05 6:16pm

thesexofit

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Cant u summerise it? Its 2:15 am. Gimme a summery.

"heres some basics" indeed.
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Reply #2 posted 08/04/05 6:19pm

BananaCologne

thesexofit said:

Cant u summerise it? Its 2:15 am. Gimme a summery.

"heres some basics" indeed.


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Reply #3 posted 08/04/05 6:20pm

superspaceboy

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thesexofit said:

Cant u summerise it? Its 2:15 am. Gimme a summery.

"heres some basics" indeed.


that was pretty basic.

Christian Zombie Vampires

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Reply #4 posted 08/04/05 8:12pm

acire

TC = Trusted Computing? More like Total Control.

Big Brother is on his way in the form of Bill Gates! omg wink

I think I'll have finally switched to Apple by the time this comes out.
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Reply #5 posted 08/04/05 9:25pm

TMPletz

I guess I won't be going to the Windows Update site when this crap starts. confused
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Reply #6 posted 08/05/05 5:18am

Mach

hmm
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Reply #7 posted 08/05/05 6:56am

Stax

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acire said:

TC = Trusted Computing? More like Total Control.

Big Brother is on his way in the form of Bill Gates! omg wink

I think I'll have finally switched to Apple by the time this comes out.



Apple is switching to the Intel chip set in 2007. Some have speculated that when it does, it will jump on the TC bandwagon. TC is not just about Microsoft. HP, IBM, Sun, Intel, Sony and AMD are all part of the TC alliance.
a psychotic is someone who just figured out what's going on
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Reply #8 posted 08/05/05 9:05am

XxAxX

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scary. but what do you wanna bet that someone will market software designed to get around this technology?
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Reply #9 posted 08/07/05 8:11pm

TMPletz

XxAxX said:

scary. but what do you wanna bet that someone will market software designed to get around this technology?


Last week (I believe) there was an update on Windows Update that required you to download before doing any other updates which, in effect, determined if you had an invalid CD key or not and blocked you from updates if you had an invalid one. That same week, someone came out with a crack for it. lol
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