----- Forwarded message from ianG <i...@iang.org> -----

Date: Tue, 30 Jul 2013 14:07:44 +0300
From: ianG <i...@iang.org>
To: Crypto discussion list <cryptogra...@randombit.net>
Subject: [cryptography] evidence for threat modelling -- street-sold hardware 
has been compromised
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.8; rv:17.0) 
Gecko/20130620 Thunderbird/17.0.7

It might be important to get this into the record for threat
modelling.  The suggestion that normally-purchased hardware has been
compromised by the bogeyman is often poo-pooed, and paying attention
to this is often thought to be too black-helicopterish to be serious.
E.g., recent discussions on the possibility of perversion of on-chip
RNGs.

This doesn't tell us how big the threat is, but it does raise it to
the level of 'evidenced'.



http://www.afr.com/p/technology/spy_agencies_ban_lenovo_pcs_on_security_HVgcKTHp4bIA4ulCPqC7SL

Computers manufactured by the world’s biggest personal computer maker,
Lenovo, have been banned from the “secret” and ‘‘top secret” ­networks
of the intelligence and defence services of Australia, the US,
Britain, Canada, and New Zealand, because of concerns they are
vulnerable to being hacked.

Multiple intelligence and defence sources in Britain and Australia
confirmed there is a written ban on computers made by the Chinese
company being used in “classified” networks.

The ban was introduced in the mid-2000s after intensive laboratory
testing of its equipment allegedly documented “back-door” hardware and
“firmware” vulnerabilities in Lenovo chips.

...
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