Dell Announces New Solutions For Its Supply Chain's Security (zdnet.com) 22
PC maker powerhouse Dell announced today a flurry of new enterprise security solutions for the company's line of enterprise products. From a report: The new services can be grouped into two categories, with (1) new solutions meant to protect the supply chain of Dell products while in transit to their customers and (2) new features meant to improve the security of Dell products while in use. While Dell has previously invested in securing its customers' supply chains, the company has announced today three new services. The first is named SafeSupply Chain Tamper Evident Services and, as its name implies, involves Dell adding anti-tampering seals to its devices, transport boxes, and even entire pallets before they leave Dell factories. The anti-tampering seals will allow buyers of Dell equipment to determine if any intermediary agents or transporters have opened boxes or devices to alter physical components. The second supply chain security offering, named the Dell SafeSupply Chain Data Sanitization Services, is meant for tampering made at the storage level.
defcon (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:defcon (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:3)
If participating in the DEFCON tamper village taught me anything, it's that "tamper-proofing" is a futile wasted effort and can be bypassed and replaced by 6 year olds.
Yes but do middle-managers prone to believing bullshit marketing claims also know that?
Re: (Score:2)
Above is not trolling. (Score:2)
It may be a wall of text, and look like that "Internet has become ... (TrueScore: 5)" guy, but it isn't. None of what I saw on a quick glance seems wrong
The length of that list is kinda his point. Even if expressed in a bad way that doesn't reach anyone.
Re: (Score:2)
The Apple claim is based upon OCSP to check for revoked certificates on signed apps. It has to use HTTP or it ceases to function if your computer clock is wrong, otherwise making for a gaping security hole. It does not track what you run and when you run it, as it actually has a cache which prevents the OS from running the same check constantly. It can also be turned off. OCSP checks occur when you visit encrypted websites too across all
What is the point ? (Score:1)
Re: What is the point ? (Score:1)
I think you donâ(TM)t understand the scope of espionage going on, both corporate and from entities like China, Iran, Pakistan, India and others. They will indeed replace or add components for a particular customer and these are very low cost and dirty because in the real world nobody thinks twice about all the dongles hanging off a computer.
Re: What is the point ? (Score:2)
And a seal will stop them how?
You think China cannot fake them? Take a guess who is probably *manufacturing* those seals! :)
And in fact the entire hardware inside too!
Probably in co-production with the NSA, through some CIA spies in China. ;)
Re: (Score:1)
Sure, state-level espionage and very well funded groups may not be caught (then again, some government spooks aren't the brightest either). But I'm talking about Indian pharma or Iranian students or the disgruntled employee coming in with nothing more than a flash drive and a Mega account which is pretty much all they can muster. That makes up the brunt of the corporate and research espionage cases and their tools are crude.
Having a tamper device that they probably won't even know exists, will catch some ca
Where is the hardware being manufactured? (Score:4, Informative)
How much good does this do for me as an if the PC is still made in China or of Chinese components? Tamper-evident packaging is nice, but I am far more concerned about where my computer is being manufactured than I am about it being tampered with in transit, which is something that can only be done on a selective basis for high value targets.
I take it as a given that the NSA probably has a backdoor into my hardware no matter where it gets manufactured. I do what I can to mitigate this, but at the end of the day, at least the United States is ostensibly a democracy and a nation of laws. The NSA might take interest in my communications if I start making a lot of calls to Moscow, but it is not going to steal my intellectual property and hand it over to my competitors. The same cannot be said of China, so if there's a choice, I'd prefer to not have Xi Jinping's spooks bugging my next laptop.
I'm willing to pay considerably more money for a PC that's been manufactured entirely within the confines of the United States or some other friendly democratic nation.
Re:Where is the hardware being manufactured? (Score:4, Informative)
The NSA might take interest in my communications if I start making a lot of calls to Moscow, but it is not going to steal my intellectual property and hand it over to my competitors.
Tell that to Airbus.
The US has a long history of industrial espionage.
Re: Where is the hardware being manufactured? (Score:2)
Well, it is literally in rhe Snowden leaks.
If anyone cared to read them. (I got lucky, I guess.)
Re: (Score:3)
If you have an example of NSA stealing IP from a US company and handing it to competitors, that would prove the point.
Re: Where is the hardware being manufactured? (Score:2)
"steal my intellectual property"
Mate, do youhave ANY clue how physics work *at all*?
Thee is no such thing as "intellectual property". It contradicts basis causality. (I can write you a paper on that.)
If you want some more money, wy don't you start working some more, and stop leeching? How's that for a legitimate real-world business model?
Re: Where is the hardware being manufactured? (Score:2)
Amn freaoong touchscreen keyboards!.
You thino you fixed all the typos, akd it still got a dozen more!
(This was written without any manual correction at all. Whotu autocorrect odd. Yeah, touchscren "keayboardsx are *tuat* shit!)
don't buy from these scammers (Score:2)
Dell? (Score:2)
I prefer Rm-rff. :)
Lol (Score:2)
Says the disgruntled employee with a box of anti-tamper seals.
Like QA and QC applied to SCS (Score:1)
Cisco (Score:2)
Didn't Cisco do a similar thing (on a smaller scale) but the US government just used the same branded tape to put the boxes back together?