Alan Cox <alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk> wrote on 08/12/2008 05:36:36 PM:
I suppose it depends on the precise interpretation of your technical
term "goodies". :-)
One of the two primary uses of the TCG technology is protection
against an attack on the software. The TCG uses the terms
attestation, integrity, platform measurements, etc. For this class of>
"goodies", the TCG technology does not protect against hardware
attacks such as replacing the TPM with a bogus device, replacing the
CRTM hardware, flashing the CRTM using a JTAG cable, lifting a TPM pin>
and asserting reset, using a JTAG cable to set breakpoints and alter
memory, etc.
For this use case, the attack model is a remote, software attack. The>
user is not considered the attacker.
(In the other primary use case, the user is the attacker, but it's an
entirely different discussion.)
(It's also important to note that the TPM itself does not completely
secure the platform. There's an entire system design around it, which>
it why I try to say "TCG technology" rather than TPM.)
--