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by mistahenry
2336 days ago
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To me, this is full admission of a complete lack of security competency. Building a hardware wallet without using a smart card or some other secure element that at least has mitigation’s against voltage/clock glitching, detects light, reduces the ability to measure power consumption, etc is negligent. Either they don’t know how to design secure solutions or they wanted to use cheaper chips since tamper resistant chips cost more. Neither is a good look |
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physical in-person key extraction after literally opening up a piece of hardware and glitching its exposed innards isn't a "critical flaw". it's baseline expectation.
I would rate the issue raised in the article as "not a bug, won't-fix." with the explanation that "Physical key extraction will always be possible regardless of anything we do."
or are people here claiming that their "better" competitors (who are using "better" hardware, more "correctly") are immune from physical attacks?
EDIT: I am keeping this even if it gets voted to -4. I don't believe a physical, local (in person) glitching attack on the innards of a device, which requires physical access and opening it, constitutes a "critical" vulnerability on a hardware cryptographic device.