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Tyler Close: Shatter-proofing Windows

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Manage episode 155121465 series 1146744
Content provided by Black Hat / CMP and Jeff Moss. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Black Hat / CMP and Jeff Moss or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
The Shatter attack uses the Windows API to subvert processes running with greater privilege than the attack code. The author of the Shatter code has made strong claims about the difficulty of fixing the underlying problem, while Microsoft has, with one exception, claimed that the attack isn't a problem at all. Whether or not Shatter is indeed an exploit worth worrying about, it uses a feature of Windows that has other malicious uses, such as keystroke logging. This talk presents a means of defeating this entire family of attacks with minimal breaking of applications and effect on the look and feel of the user interface. Tyler Close is a researcher and developer, working in the field of secure, multi-user, distributed applications since 1998. He is the designer of the web-calculus, a messaging model for creating POLA interfaces between heterogeneous applications. He is a developer for an ongoing series of applications in the POLA genre, including: Waterken Server, for web-services; petname tool, anti-phishing browser extension; httpsy, decentralized authentication for the WWW; E language, P2P scripting language; Waterken DB, capability-based object database; Waterken IOU, generic rights transfer protocol. Tyler joined HP as a Visiting Scientist in 2005 to work on the Virus Safe Computing Initiative.
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61 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 155121465 series 1146744
Content provided by Black Hat / CMP and Jeff Moss. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Black Hat / CMP and Jeff Moss or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.
The Shatter attack uses the Windows API to subvert processes running with greater privilege than the attack code. The author of the Shatter code has made strong claims about the difficulty of fixing the underlying problem, while Microsoft has, with one exception, claimed that the attack isn't a problem at all. Whether or not Shatter is indeed an exploit worth worrying about, it uses a feature of Windows that has other malicious uses, such as keystroke logging. This talk presents a means of defeating this entire family of attacks with minimal breaking of applications and effect on the look and feel of the user interface. Tyler Close is a researcher and developer, working in the field of secure, multi-user, distributed applications since 1998. He is the designer of the web-calculus, a messaging model for creating POLA interfaces between heterogeneous applications. He is a developer for an ongoing series of applications in the POLA genre, including: Waterken Server, for web-services; petname tool, anti-phishing browser extension; httpsy, decentralized authentication for the WWW; E language, P2P scripting language; Waterken DB, capability-based object database; Waterken IOU, generic rights transfer protocol. Tyler joined HP as a Visiting Scientist in 2005 to work on the Virus Safe Computing Initiative.
  continue reading

61 episodes

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