Introduction

The Most ‘Physically Secure’ Computer Ever Built

One way that cyber security improves is through encryption, but physical security has not gone by the wayside. One popular security feature which has been featured in many Mission Impossible films is a "self-destruction" mechanism. Think about this idea and discuss the questions with your group. Make sure you write down the ideas you come up with in Exercise 1.

  1. What types of technologies in security have you seen before?
  2. What is one kind of imaginary security technology?
  3. Can you think of an example of a specific technology which was previously only used in fiction but which now is a reality?

Exercise


Reading

Self-destructing PC could be most ‘physically secure’ computer ever built

By Darren Allan

Orwl PC gets wise to hackers with a raft of tamper-proof defenses

Do you take your computer’s security very seriously? Then a new PC which is set to ship next month may well be of interest, as it boasts a number of security features and defense measures, including a self-destruct mechanism which kicks in to wipe data if someone physically tampers with the machine.

Orwl is a compact PC – it’s a disc-shaped device about the size of your palm – which is designed to be the ‘world’s most physically secure computer’ according to the maker.

It comes with a unique key fob that uses NFC to communicate with the machine, and should the fob (and therefore the user) move more than 10 meters away from the PC, it locks itself – and shuts down its USB (and other) ports so they can’t possibly be used as an avenue for potential skullduggery.

Orwl is also full of various tamper-monitoring sensors (including motion/shock detection and temperature monitors), and should it detect any tampering with its case by a would-be attacker trying to gain physical access to the PC, it can wipe the encryption key for its self-encrypted (RSA-4096) Intel SSD – meaning that your data won’t fall into the wrong hands.

Super secure

The device also benefits from other security measures including secure boot, secure firmware upgrade, and a password is needed to turn it on (backed up with two-factor authentication, plus the aforementioned key fob).

Core specs include a Skylake Core m7 processor (up to 1.2GHz) with Intel HD Graphics 515, 8GB of system RAM, and the encrypted SSD can be up to 480GB in size.

You also get 802.11ac Wi-Fi, Bluetooth LE 4.2, an HDMI connector and a pair of USB Type-C ports. It can come with Windows installed, or you can go for Linux: either Ubuntu or Qubes OS (the latter being a specifically security-focused distro to tighten things up even further on the software side).

As we already mentioned, Orwl is set to ship in August, but it doesn’t come cheap with the PC starting at $1,699 (around £1,310, AU$2,230) for the base version with a plastic case (there’s also a ‘glass’ model) and a 120GB SSD.

Obviously it’s a niche product at that price bracket, aimed at real security enthusiasts only (and indeed businesses and government employees). But nonetheless it’s an interesting look at some of the fancy security technology we might eventually see being incorporated into more run-of-the-mill PCs in the future.

Via: BGR

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