Sony's
Microvault USB memory key software could render users vulnerable to a malware
attack, security vendor
F-Secure
has
claimed.
The Sony devices feature an integrated fingerprint reader that allows the
user to securely store information. Unlocking the information, however, requires
the installation of special software on a Windows computer.
The application creates a hidden directory on the user's hard drive. At least
some antivirus applications will be unable to access and scan the contents of
this directory, claimed F-Secure researcher Mika Tolvanen.
This potentially allows malware authors to hide their creations from security
software.
The technology has rootkit-like characteristics designed to hide files and
processes from the end user as well as the system.
Rootkits are best known for their use by malware authors to prevent detection
and removal of their creations by security applications.
The term originally referred to tools that allow attackers to gain root
access to Unix systems without the owner's knowledge, but has since taken on the
meaning of cloaking technologies.
The Microvault case closely resembles a highly publicised
security
scandal from 2005 when Sony used rootkit technology to hide digital rights
management software from end users when they tried to play certain audio CDs on
a Windows computer.
The XCP software, developed by First 4 Internet, was generally considered to
be clumsily architected.
Sony initially denied that its technology comprised a security risk, but
quickly backed downwhen
malware emerged
that exploited the flaw. The firm paid several millions settling lawsuits.
Sony's entertainment division deployed the rootkit technology to prevent
users from uninstalling the digital rights management technology, an action that
critics claimed to be at odds with fair use.
In the case of the Microvault memory keys, F-Secure suggested that the file
could be hidden to ensure the accuracy of the data signatures, thereby
protecting the data stored on the device.
"We feel that rootkit-like cloaking techniques are not the right way to go
here," Tolvanen commented.
F-Secure said that it was unsuccessful in contacting Sony.
Sony did not immediately respond to request for comment.
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