Thursday, November 27, 2008

Physical key security (highlights from ACM CCS)


do not forget the key
Originally uploaded by purplbutrfly
I recently attended the security conference ACM CCS, and I wanted to share some of the talks I really enjoyed at the conference. Many of these are a little outside the scope of web security, but I think you'll find them interesting too!

Today's post is about the paper Reconsidering Physical Key Secrecy: Teleduplication via Optical Decoding by Benjamin Laxton, Kai Wang and Stefan Savage at the University of California, San Diego. This one was almost out of scope even for the conference (which is Computer and Communications Security) because it focused on physical security, and the computer was only involved as a tool to break it.

Mechanical locks and keys are a staple of physical security. A basic key is a piece of metal with notches along one side. When pushed into a lock, the key moves a set of tumblers inside the lock so that the whole thing can be turned, allowing the door (or whatever) to be opened. The thing to note about keys, in this case, is that for a given key manufacturer, those notches only have a set number of possible depths, and there are only a set number of notches. The whole key can be represented as a string of numbers showing the notches.

So what they did, is they built a system that could take a picture of a key and produce that string of numbers. Once you have that string, you can enter it into a key-cutting machine, and voila, you have a copy of that key. (In fact, some keys they showed actually had this number written on the key for easy duplication in case it was lost!)

The thing that was perhaps a little disturbing is how easily they could do this. They could duplicate a key from all sorts of photos, with keys at all sorts of angles. They showed a lot of online photos of people's keys and mentioned the popular "what's in your bag?" meme. Their web searches found many keys that their system could decode and duplicate... often people even gave the address that went with the keys!

Then they got into stuff that really seemed to come out of a spy movie. With a bird spotting scope and a digital camera, they started taking pictures of keys that were further and further away... at 35 feet they could duplicate the key every time. At 65 feet, it took two guesses before they could get all keys. At 100 feet, still only three guesses were necessary. And then they climbed onto the roof of one of the university buildings and took a picture of a set of keys 195 feet away on a table below, and still managed to decode one of them correctly. James Bond apparently could use some modern academic research!

The take-home message here? If you want to keep things physically secure, you'd better make sure no one sees the keys! For more information, check out the complete paper.

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