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20060926 Tuesday September 26, 2006

TCPA - I really don't trust you!

Trusted Computing Platform Alliance - an initiative to manage rights on hardware level - isn't really a thing I trust in. two designers from Augsburg (where I live in Germany) Benjamin Stephan and Lutz Vogel have given a video statement which you HAVE to see.

A better resolution is available at http://www.lafkon.net/tc/.

Why I think TCPA isn't good
TCPA stands for Trusted Computing Platform Alliance. For the technology we will speak from TCP (The trusted computing platform). This plans that every computer will have a TPM (Trusted Platform Module), also known as Fritz-Chip, built-in. At later development stages, these functions will be directly included into CPUs, graphiccards, harddisks, soundcards, bios and so on. This will secure that the computer is in a TCPA-conform state and that he checks that it's always in this state.

This means: On the first level comes the hardware, on the second comes TCPA and then comes the user. The complete communication works with a 2048 bit strong encryption, so it's also secure enough to make it impossible to decrypt this in realtime for a longer time. This secures that the TCPA can prevent any unwanted software and hardware. The long term result will be that it will be impossible to use hardware and software that's not approved by the TCPA. Presumably there will be high costs to get this certification and that these would be too much for little and mid-range companies. Therefore open-source and freeware would be condemned to die, because without such a certification the software will simply not work. In the long term only the big companies would survive and could control the market as they would like.

More info at http://www.againsttcpa.com/.

Posted by Horst Thieme ( Sep 26 2006, 04:46:49 PM CEST ) Permalink Comments [1]