The Hindu News Update Service

News Update Service
Tuesday, November 13, 2007 : 1615 Hrs

Sci. & Tech.
Security loophole found in Windows operating system

A group of researchers headed by Dr. Benny Pinkas from the Department of 
Computer Science at the University of Haifa succeeded in finding a security 
vulnerability
in Microsoft's "Windows 2000" operating system. The significance of the 
loophole: emails, passwords, credit card numbers, if they were typed into the 
computer,
and actually all correspondence that emanated from a computer using "Windows 
2000" is susceptible to tracking, according to Eurekalert, the news service
of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

"This is not a theoretical discovery. Anyone who exploits this security 
loophole can definitely access this information on other computers," remarked 
Dr.
Pinkas.

Various security vulnerabilities in different computer operating systems have 
been discovered over the years. Previous security breaches have enabled hackers
to follow correspondence from a computer from the time of the breach onwards. 
This newly discovered loophole, exposed by a team of researchers which included,
along with Dr. Pinkas, Hebrew University graduate students Zvi Gutterman and 
Leo Dorrendorf, enables hackers to access information that was sent from the
computer prior to the security breach and even information that is no longer 
stored on the computer.

The researchers found the security loophole in the random number generator of 
Windows. This is a program which is, among other things, a critical building
block for file and email encryption, and for the SSL encryption protocol which 
is used by all Internet browsers. For example: in correspondence with a
bank or any other website that requires typing in a password, or a credit card 
number, the random number generator creates a random encryption key, which
is used to encrypt the communication so that only the relevant website can read 
the correspondence. The research team found a way to decipher how the random
number generator works and thereby compute previous and future encryption keys 
used by the computer, and eavesdrop on private communication.

"There is no doubt that hacking into a computer using our method requires 
advanced planning. On the other hand, simpler security breaches also require 
planning,
and I believe that there is room for concern at large companies, or for people 
who manage sensitive information using their computers, who should understand
that the privacy of their data is at risk," explained Dr. Pinkas.

According to the researchers, who have already notified the Microsoft security 
response team about their discovery, although they only checked "Windows
2000" (which is currently the third most popular operating system in use) they 
assume that newer versions of "Windows", XP and Vista, use similar random
number generators and may also be vulnerable.

Their conclusion is that Microsoft needs to improve the way it encodes 
information. They recommend that Microsoft publish the code of their random 
number
generators as well as of other elements of the "Windows" security system to 
enable computer security experts 
To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the subject unsubscribe.

To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, please 
visit the list home page at
  http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in

Reply via email to