USENIX Conference Policies
Tamper Resistance -- a Cautionary Note new
Ross Anderson, Cambridge University; Markus Kuhn, Purdue University
An increasing number of systems, from pay-TV to electronic purses, rely on the tamper resistance of smartcards and other security processors. We describe a number of attacks on such systems - some old, some new and some that are simply little known outside the chip testing community. We conclude that trusting tamper resistance is problematic; smartcards are broken routinely, and even a device that was described by a government signals agency as `the most secure processor generally available' turns out to be vulnerable. Designers of secure systems should consider the consequences with care.
BibTeX
@inproceedings {260552,
author = {Ross Anderson and Markus Kuhn},
title = {Tamper Resistance -- a Cautionary Note new},
booktitle = {2nd USENIX Workshop on Electronic Commerce (EC 96)},
year = {1996},
address = {Oakland, CA},
url = {https://www.usenix.org/conference/2nd-usenix-workshop-electronic-commerce/tamper-resistance-cautionary-note},
publisher = {USENIX Association},
month = nov
}
author = {Ross Anderson and Markus Kuhn},
title = {Tamper Resistance -- a Cautionary Note new},
booktitle = {2nd USENIX Workshop on Electronic Commerce (EC 96)},
year = {1996},
address = {Oakland, CA},
url = {https://www.usenix.org/conference/2nd-usenix-workshop-electronic-commerce/tamper-resistance-cautionary-note},
publisher = {USENIX Association},
month = nov
}