On 7/4/06, Taral <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 7/4/06, Andrea Pasquinucci <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> About RNG, does someone in the list have any comment, ideas on this
> http://www.idquantique.com/products/quantis.htm
Why? Noise-based RNGs are just as random and just as "quantum". :)
Hella
the same level with supposedly the same
protection profile ... were in any way comparable (assuming you actually
have access to protection profiles that being used for the evaluations).
i believe some of the earlier mention chips
http://www.garlic.com/~lynn/aadsm24.htm#19 Use of TPM chip for R
Ben Laurie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>So ... where are these rebadged smartcards deployed? Who rebadges them?
System integrators usually. The way it works is that the company that fabs
the devices (typically Atmel, STMicroelectronics, or Infineon) create the
silicon. Then a second-level vendo
Thor Lancelot Simon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>On Mon, Jul 03, 2006 at 10:41:05AM -0600, Anne & Lynn Wheeler wrote:
>> however, at least some of the TPM chips have RNGs that have some level
>> of certification (although you might have to do some investigation to
>> find out what specific chip is
On Mon, Jul 03, 2006 at 10:41:05AM -0600, Anne & Lynn Wheeler wrote:
>
> however, at least some of the TPM chips have RNGs that have some level
> of certification (although you might have to do some investigation to
> find out what specific chip is being used for TPM).
See one of the examples i
Peter Gutmann wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ("Hal Finney") writes:
>
>> A few weeks ago I asked for information on using the increasingly prevalent
>> built-in TPM chips in computers (especially laptops) as a random number
>> source.
>
> You have to be pretty careful here. Most of the TPM chips are
On 7/4/06, Andrea Pasquinucci <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
About RNG, does someone in the list have any comment, ideas on this
http://www.idquantique.com/products/quantis.htm
Why? Noise-based RNGs are just as random and just as "quantum". :)
--
Taral <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
"You can't prove anythin
| On 7/3/06, Leichter, Jerry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
| > You're damned if you do and damned if you don't. Would you want to use
a
| > hardware RNG that was *not* inside a tamper-proof package - i.e., inside
| > of a package that allows someone to tamper with it?
|
| Yes. If someone has physic
Travis H. wrote:
http://www.usenix.org/publications/library/proceedings/smartcard99/technical.html
http://www.usenix.org/publications/library/proceedings/cardis02/tech.html
and even this ... having to resort to the wayback machine
http://web.archive.org/web/20030417083810/http://www.smartcard
About RNG, does someone in the list have any comment, ideas on this
http://www.idquantique.com/products/quantis.htm
"Quantis is a physical random number generator exploiting an elementary
quantum optics process. Photons - light particles - are sent one by one
onto a semi-transparent mirror and
On 7/2/06, Peter Gutmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
You have to be pretty careful here. Most of the TPM chips are just rebadged
smart cards, and the RNGs on those are often rather dubious.
My last email of the day, I promise ;-)
And if you're interested in some of the smart card developments,
On 7/3/06, Leichter, Jerry <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
You're damned if you do and damned if you don't. Would you want to use a
hardware RNG that was *not* inside a tamper-proof package - i.e., inside
of a package that allows someone to tamper with it?
Yes. If someone has physical access to yo
Peter Gutmann wrote:
You have to be pretty careful here. Most of the TPM chips are just rebadged
smart cards, and the RNGs on those are often rather dubious. A standard
technique is to repeatedly encrypt some stored seed with an onboard block
cipher (e.g. DES) as your "RNG". Beyond the obvious
| > A few weeks ago I asked for information on using the increasingly
| > prevalent built-in TPM chips in computers (especially laptops) as a
| > random number source. I got some good advice and want to summarize the
| > information for the benefit of others.
|
| Thanks for the useful summary! F
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ("Hal Finney") writes:
>A few weeks ago I asked for information on using the increasingly prevalent
>built-in TPM chips in computers (especially laptops) as a random number
>source.
You have to be pretty careful here. Most of the TPM chips are just rebadged
smart cards, and the
On Thu, 29 Jun 2006, "Hal Finney" wrote:
A few weeks ago I asked for information on using the increasingly
prevalent built-in TPM chips in computers (especially laptops) as a
random number source. I got some good advice and want to summarize the
information for the benefit of others.
Thanks
A few weeks ago I asked for information on using the increasingly
prevalent built-in TPM chips in computers (especially laptops) as a
random number source. I got some good advice and want to summarize the
information for the benefit of others.
The TPM chip as spec'd by the Trusted Computing Group
Finding a good source of random bits is a frequent problem in
cryptographic applications. Recently many computers have begun shipping
with a TPM chip, which among other things includes a hardware RNG.
Does anyone know of Windows software which can use the TPM for this
purpose? Perhaps via MS CAPI
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