• Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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    2 days ago

    The word “Gave” is really doing some heavy lifting in that title. Microsoft produced the keys in response to a warrant as required by law.

    If you don’t want a company, any company, to produce your data when given a warrant then you can’t give the company that data. At all. Ever.

    Not fast food joints, not Uber, not YouTube, not even the grocery store.

    • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 day ago

      If you can’t possess the keys, you can’t give them when there’s a warrant. Microsoft designed a system that could obtain and decrypt those keys on purpose.

    • Kokesh@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Yes. But this completely invalidates the encryption. If anyone can decrypt your data without you giving the keys to them, it is not really encrypted.

      • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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        2 days ago

        The encryption key is data, don’t give it to ANYONE. “Two people can keep a secret if one of them is dead.”

          • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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            19 hours ago

            It may seem that way but I’m really not. An encryption key is just data. It’s critical security data to be sure but it’s still data and like other data you shouldn’t share anything that you wouldn’t want made public.

            Don’t want MS to cough up your data when asked? Then don’t give it to them. In regards to your BL key that means storing it another way, such as on a jump drive or printing it out.

            In the end if you have data of any type that you absolutely DO NOT want made public then you need to retain that data locally. If that means leaving the Microsoft or any other ecosystem then that’s the price that needs paid for keeping your data under your control.

            This is the foundation of the entire privacy movement.

            • Encrypt-Keeper@lemmy.world
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              19 hours ago

              No, you really are. If you’re in control of an encryption key, then it’s perfectly fine to “give Microsoft your data” that’s encrypted by that key. An encryption key isn’t “just data”, it’s data that’s used to encrypt other data.

              The problem here is not that Microsoft has access to your data, it’s that Microsoft has access to your encryption key.

        • Ech@lemmy.ca
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          2 days ago

          Anyone as in “a single person”. They don’t mean everyone has access.

        • cley_faye@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Sure. It’s not anyone. It’s anyone that can get a warrant. Or anyone that have enough power/underhanded influence to ask them nicely. Or any admin that have access to cloud storage at MS (remember they where caught with some exec having full access to that a while ago). Or any big leak that could exfiltrate these data. And probably a handful of other people, like, someone getting access to your MS account for whatever reason (which kinda happen, seeing how people lose their mail account to phishing/scams all the time) suddenly having access to your keys from there.

          If your keys are in a DB somewhere, there’s a lot of way they could get out. Would these ways coincide with someone actually having your drive at hand? Probably not. Still, the key not existing in plaintext in some third party storage close all these holes.

        • nutsack@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 days ago

          what happens when fydor monikov the sleeper agent from the kgb working at the fbi gets a copy of these master keys

      • Wispy2891@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        In Windows 11, if the main user logs in with a Microsoft account (which is mandatory unless you do some hacks during the install), it automatically encrypts the main drive by default without asking the user consent and uploads the decryption key to Microsoft servers (again, without user consent, but usually this is appreciated because sometimes automatic BIOS updates via windows update wipe the tpm and keep all your data at ransom.)

      • cley_faye@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Your computer generate a random key using (hopefully) a trusted PRNG with good enough sources. This key is then used to encrypt your data. This key is stored in your computer’s TPM module, and provided to the OS only if the chip approves all the checks in places. In addition, you get that key displayed to you, so you can write it down (or alternatively save the key file somewhere of your convenience). This is relatively good as far as security goes (unless the TPM is broken, which can happen).

        And then, unless you jumped through hoops to disable it, your PC sends the key to Microsoft so they can just keep it linked to your account. That’s the part that sucks, because then, they have the key, can unlock your drive on your behalf, and have to produce it if asked by a judge or something.

        Note that there are relatively safe way to protect these keys even if they are backed up in “the cloud”, by encrypting them beforehand using your actual password. It’s not absolutely perfect, but can make it very hard/costly/impossible to retrieve, depending on the resources of the attacker/government agency. But MS didn’t chose this way. I don’t know if it’s because of sheer incompetence, inattention, or because this feature is claimed to be here to “help” people that lose their key, and as such are likely to lose their password too, but it is what it is.

        • “help” people that lose their key

          Funny enough, people have lost access to their bitlocker encrypted drive because of some weird issues that triggered the windows intallation to revert to asking for the full bitlocker encryption key (I think if you disable secure boot or mess with CPU upgrades or the TPM, or some weird update broke, that can happen), which they didn’t have and forgot the microsoft account. But microsoft can’t help because they forgot about their acount credentials.

          They should’ve asked the FBI for help lolz

          • Wispy2891@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            It happened TWICE on my Lenovo laptop, when it automatically installed a firmware update from windows update

        • jnod4@lemmy.ca
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          2 days ago

          I’m pretty sure all tpms can be read with an electric interference reader when they’re probed, as an intended loophole

      • Dlayknee@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Microsoft built the encryption in Windows so know how to get around it. In theory that remains a closely guarded secret but there are the warrants and the NSA and…

          • ChogChog@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            I’d go as far as to say it’s similar to a landlord requiring a key to access the apartment your renting from them. Sure, they probably won’t abuse that power, most don’t, but the doesn’t mean they can’t.

            The bigger picture to me is it’s pretty clear then internally, Microsoft views you as a “tenant” of THEIR OS. Not a purchaser. This is why they use the words “This PC” in replace of “My PC”.

            Yes, I think we can absolutely say that companies are pushing for consumers to use the cloud instead of their own hardware, but in this context, I’d say it’s more egregious showing their mindset that you’re just renting their software from them.

            • Nah, a landlord cannot legally deny access to an apartment/house you paid for, like you can literally call the cops (make sure you have a copy of the lease safely stored on your phone or something) and get let back in. They need a court case to evict you.

              But microsoft can deny access your OS, and with the manatory full disk encryption implemented, you can’t even get back in to retrieve your data. (kinda like WannaCrypt) And this would be all legal since ToS and mandatory arbittation bs. No court case needed to hold your files hostage.

              So I’d say Microsoft is like 10x worse than a landlord