[Infowarrior] - Password-cracking chip causes security concerns]

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Fri Oct 26 13:17:01 UTC 2007


Password-cracking chip causes security concerns

http://technology.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn12825

By Andrew Brandt
NewScientist.com news service
24 October 2007

A technique for cracking computer passwords using inexpensive
off-the-shelf computer graphics hardware is causing a stir in the
computer security community.

Elcomsoft, a software company based in Moscow, Russia, has filed a US
patent for the technique. It takes advantage of the "massively parallel
processing" capabilities of a graphics processing unit (GPU) - the
processor normally used to produce realistic graphics for video games.

Using an $800 graphics card from nVidia called the GeForce 8800 Ultra,
Elcomsoft increased the speed of its password cracking by a factor of
25, according to the company's CEO, Vladimir Katalov.

The toughest passwords, including those used to log in to a Windows
Vista computer, would normally take months of continuous computer
processing time to crack using a computer's central processing unit
(CPU). By harnessing a $150 GPU - less powerful than the nVidia 8800
card - Elcomsoft says they can cracked in just three to five days. Less
complex passwords can be retrieved in minutes, rather than hours or
days.

It is the way a GPU processes data that provides the speed increase.
NVidia spokesman Andrew Humber describes the process using the analogy
of searching for words in a book. "A [normal computer processor] would
read the book, starting at page 1 and finishing at page 500," he says.
"A GPU would take the book, tear it into a 100,000 pieces, and read all
of those pieces at the same time."

Benjamin Jun, of Cryptography Research based in San Francisco, US, says
massively parallel processing is ideally suited to the task of breaking
passwords. And, while concerned about the development, Jun also pays
tribute to the achievement: "A number of us have been following advances
in those platforms, and there's a lot of elegant, intelligent design."

Password cracking can be used to unlock data on a computer, but will not
usually work on a banking or commercial website. This is because is
takes too long to run through multiple passwords, and because a site
will normally block a user after several failed attempts.

Jun adds that the trend towards encrypting whole hard drives with
increasingly long cryptographic keys still means it is becoming more
difficult to access sensitive data. "Should I throw away my web server
and run for the hills?" he says. "I don't think so."

NVidia released a software development kit for its graphics hardware in
February 2007. Known as CUDA, the kit lets programmers access the
computing power of the GPU directly. It has gained a following among
those with a need for high-performance computing, particularly in fields
such as science and engineering.

"[CUDA] is a huge thing for the oil and gas industry, for the financial
sector, and for scientists," Humber says. He adds that CUDA is also be
being used by a company called Evolved Machines to simulate the way the
human brain wires itself.

Elcomsoft says it took three months to develop code to take advantage of
a GPU, and the company plans to introduce the feature into some of its
password cracking products over time.




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