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596 points pimterry | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.236s | source
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willcipriano ◴[] No.36862717[source]
Why can't you fake remote attestation? I imagine it's a bit more involved than swapping a user agent but is there some magic mechanism that makes it impossible to spoof?
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sidewndr46 ◴[] No.36862781[source]
On Intel & similar platforms, some forms of attestation are bidirectional. There is both a remote server attesting to the code's validity and the local device is able to attest that the code is ran in a manner that doesn't permit the user to modify or inspect it. This is the basis of almost all practical DRM methods and is provided under the guise of the Trusted Platform Module.

One interesting application of this kind of technology was to remove the 'analog hole'. When playing protected content, even the video stream from your PC to your monitor is actually encrypted in a manner that ostensibly prevents anyone from interecepting it.

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1. mschuster91 ◴[] No.36863854[source]
> One interesting application of this kind of technology was to remove the 'analog hole'. When playing protected content, even the video stream from your PC to your monitor is actually encrypted in a manner that ostensibly prevents anyone from interecepting it.

And yet, despite these fucking morons in the standard committees wasting (probably) millions of dollars in implementing CSS, HDCP and whatnot, and often enough bricked existing devices by revoking keys, HDCP strippers remain available for a dozen dollars or so on ebay, or AnyDVD so you don't have to bother with any copy protection at all.

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2. sidewndr46 ◴[] No.36864011[source]
I don't think HDCP was ever meant to actually stop this sort of thing. Just to make it difficult and criminal.
3. charcircuit ◴[] No.36869177[source]
>HDCP strippers remain available for a dozen dollars or so on ebay

These don't work on the latest HDCP.