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content/posts/ihsm-worlds-first-diy-hsm/index.rst
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title: "New Paper on Inertial Hardware Security Modules"
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date: 2021-11-23T23:42:20+01:00
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World's First DIY HSM
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=====================
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Last week, Prof. Dr. Björn Scheuermann and I have `published our first joint paper on Hardware Security Modules
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<https://tches.iacr.org/index.php/TCHES/article/view/9290>`__. In our paper, we introduce Inertial Hardware Security
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Modules (IHSMs), a new way of building high-security HSMs from basic components. I think the technology we demonstrate
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in our paper might allow some neat applications where some civil organization deploys a service that no one, not even
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they themselves, can snoop on. Anyone can built an IHSM without needing any fancy equipment, which makes me optimistic
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that maybe the ideas of the `Cypherpunk movement <https://www.activism.net/cypherpunk/manifesto.html>`__ aren't obsolete
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after all, despite even the word "crypto" having been co-opted by radical capitalist environmental destructionists.
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An IHSM is basically an ultra-secure enclosure for something like a server or a raspberry pi that even someone with
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unlimited resources would have a really hard time cracking without destroying all data stored in it. The principle of an
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IHSM is the same as that of a `normal HSM`_. You have a payload that contains really secret data. There's really no way
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to prevent an attacker with physical access to the thing from opening it given enough time and abrasive discs for their
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angle grinder. So what you do instead is that you make it self-destruct its secrets within microseconds of anyone
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tampering with it. Usually, such HSMs are used for storing credit card pins and other financial data. They're expensive
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as fuck, all the while being about the same processing speed as a smartphone. Traditional HSMs use printed or
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lithographically patterned conductive foils for their security mesh. These foils are not an off-the-shelf component and
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are made in a completely custom manufacturing process. To create your own, you would have to re-engineer that entire
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process and probably spend some serious money on production machines.
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Inertial HSMs take the concept of traditional HSMs, but replace the usual tamper detection mesh with a few security mesh
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PCBs. These PCBs are coarser than traditional meshes by orders of magnitude, and would alone not even be close to enough
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to keep out even a moderately motivated attacker. IHSMs fix this issue by spinning the entire tamper detection mesh at
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very high speed. To tamper with the mesh, an attacker would have to stop it. This, in turn, can be easily detected by
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the mesh's alarm circuitry using a simple accelerometer as a rotation sensor.
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In our paper, we have shown a working prototype of the core concepts one needs to build such an IHSM. To build an IHSM
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you only need a basic electronics lab. I built the prototype in our paper at home during one of Germany's COVID
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lockdowns. You can have a look at our code and CAD on `my git <https://git.jaseg.de/ihsm.git>`__. What is missing right
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now is an integration of all of these fragments into something cohesive that an interested person with the right tools
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could go out and build. We are planning to release this sort of documentation at some point, but right now we are
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focusing our effort on the next iteration of the design instead. Stay tuned for updates ;)
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.. _`normal HSM`: {{<ref "posts/hsm-basics/index.rst">}}
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