This looks fascinating.

- Eric

On Fri, Feb 16, 2018 at 3:08 PM, Jerry Feldman <[email protected]> wrote:

> When: February 21, 2018 7:00PM (6:30PM for Q&A) Topic: Secure Keystores with 
> TPM 2.0 Moderators: James Bottomley , Distinguished Engineer , IBM Research 
> Location: MIT Building E-51, Room 145 ** Note room change Summary: Using TPM 
> 2.0 As a Secure Keystore on your Laptop Abstract: For decades, all laptops 
> have come with a TPM. Now with Microsoft forcing the transition to the next 
> generation, Linux faces a challenge in that all the previous TPM 1.2 tools 
> don't work with 2.0. Having to create new tools for TPM 2.0 also provides the 
> opportunity to integrate the TPM more closely into our current crypto systems 
> and thus give Linux the advantage of TPM resident and therefore secure 
> private keys. This talks will provide the current state of play in using TPM 
> 2.0 in place of crypto sticks and USB keys for secure key handling; including 
> the algorithm agility of TPM 2.0 which finally provides a support for 
> Elliptic Curve keys which have become the default recently. This talk will 
> provi
 de an overview of current TSS (Trusted computing group Software Stack) for TPM 
2.0 implementation on Linux, including a discussion of the two distinct Intel 
and IBM stacks with their relative strengths and weaknesses. We will then move 
on to integration of the TSS into existing crypto system implementations that 
allow using TPM resident keys to be used with common tools like openssl, 
gnutls, gpg, openssh and gnome-keyring. We will report on the current state of 
that integration including demonstrations of how it works and future plans. The 
ultimate goal is to enable the seamless use of TPM resident keys in all places 
where encrypted private keys are currently used, thus increasing greatly the 
security posture of a standard Linux desktop. Bio James Bottomley is a 
Distinguished Engineer at IBM Research where he works on Cloud and Container 
technology. He is also Linux Kernel maintainer of the SCSI subsystem. He has 
been a Director on the Board of the Linux Foundation and Chair
  of its Technical Advisory Board. He went to university at Cambridge for both 
his undergraduate and doctoral degrees after which he joined AT&T Bell labs to 
work on Distributed Lock Manager technology for clustering. In 2000 he helped 
found SteelEye Technology, a High availability company for Linux and Windows, 
becoming Vice President and CTO. He joined Novell in 2008 as a Distinguished 
Engineer at Novell's SUSE Labs, Parallels (later Odin) in 2011 as CTO of Server 
Virtualization and IBM Research in 2016. For further information and directions 
please consult the BLU Web site http://www.blu.org Parking: MIT lots require 
permits after hours. All Cambridge parking meters use Passport by Phone: 
https://www.cambridgema.gov/traffic/Parking/paybyphone This is active on all 
Cambridge metered parking spaces. Meters are free after 8PM For further 
information and directions please consult the BLU Web site http://www.blu.org 
-- Jerry Feldman  Boston Linux and Unix PGP key id:3BC1EB90 PG
 P Key fingerprint: 49E2 C52A FC5A A31F 8D66 C0AF 7CEA 30FC 3BC1 EB90 
_______________________________________________ Announce mailing list 
[email protected] http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/announce 
_______________________________________________ Discuss mailing list 
[email protected] http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss @blu.org>
_______________________________________________
Discuss mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.blu.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss

Reply via email to