Author Topic: Darpa Seeks to Reveal Backdoors and Other Hidden Malicious Functionality  (Read 79 times)

Offline menotu

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November 30, 2012

New DARPA Program Seeks to Reveal Backdoors and Other Hidden Malicious Functionality in Commercial IT Devices

DARPA starts the Vetting Commodity IT Software and Firmware program and announces upcoming Proposers’ Day.

The scenario is one that information security experts dread: widespread dissemination of commercial technology that is secretly wired to function in unintended ways or even spy on its users. From this vantage point, mobile phones, network routers, computer work stations and any other device hooked up to a network can provide a point of entry for an adversary.

For the Department of Defense this issue is even more of a concern now than ever before as DoD personnel rely on equipment bought in large quantities and built with components manufactured all over the world. DoD’s growing dependence on the global supply chain makes device, software and firmware security an imperative. Backdoors, malicious software and other vulnerabilities unknown to the user could enable an adversary to use a device to accomplish a variety of harmful objectives, including the exfiltration of sensitive data and the sabotage of critical operations. Determining the security of every device DoD uses in a timely fashion is beyond current capabilities.

To address the threat of malicious code, DARPA is starting the Vetting Commodity IT Software and Firmware (VET) program to look for innovative, large-scale approaches to verifying the security and functionality of commodity IT devices (those commercial information technology devices bought by DoD) to ensure they are free of hidden backdoors and malicious functionality. On December 12th, DARPA will host a Proposers’ Day in Arlington, Va. Here, participants will be briefed on the program and anticipated solicitation.

Vetting Commodity

http://www.darpa.mil/NewsEvents/Releases/2012/11/30.aspx
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