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wavxmaster

04/19/07 9:12 AM

#141556 RE: wavxmaster #141554

From an e-mail from Lark Allen:

"The DARTT RFP came out last week and yes, Wave has been tracking its status and requirements."


Yes, the Gov't moves slowly, but it does move. When one reads: "the National Security Agency (NSA), has recently adopted a standard for full disk drive encryption based on the TPM."

And then this:

"Thus, the solution depends on a robust set of institutional policies to support drive encryption, including education for users and IT support personnel. The agency chose this method so
that users wouldn't find themselves locked out of drives before setting up their own access."

Who comes to mind? Who has worked with Seagate for the last 3 years developing the software that manages Seagates' FDE Harddrives within a TPM environment?

WAVE and only WAVE!!!;)

Now it seems that the TPM is going to be a requirement across the WHOLE GOVERNMENT!!! Who has the only "interoperable TPM management software?

WAVE and only WAVE!!!;)

Don't give up you shares to cheaply! There are over 2 million shorts at last count!


National Security Agency
The U.S. government's primary agency for the gathering of electronic intelligence, the National Security
Agency (NSA), has recently adopted a standard for full disk drive encryption based on the TPM. Published
NSA documentation cites how the agency has instituted full drive encryption in response to the broad
impact of data theft, the large variety of parties affect by such thievery, new legislation requiring
institutions to be responsible for data security and integrity, and changes in computing infrastructure and
user practices, all of which require both innovation in security measures and cooperation among branches
of the agency and other government agencies to protect stored data from theft and loss.
Following a practice long established with respect to incubating private industry, the NSA chose a solution
developed by the U.S. information technology industry. Also, the agency thought that using TCG
architecture would help ensure compatibility among and reliability of its vast array of PC clients. Benefits
of the architecture that the NSA cited for putting the encryption function on the disk drives included cost
effectiveness based on economies of scale, transparency in the sense that encryption implemented directly
on the drive would have zero performance impact, and the ease with which the standard architecture could
be sustained in future disk drive products.
The agency described some of the details of its implementation. Since access control is set by default to
"off," user action is required to achieve security. When a new PC is deployed, the user must set his or her
password to lock the drive. Thus, the solution depends on a robust set of institutional policies to support
drive encryption, including education for users and IT support personnel. The agency chose this method so
that users wouldn't find themselves locked out of drives before setting up their own access.


U.S. Army
The Army’s Network Enterprise Technology Command (Netcom) announced modules would henceforth be required for hardware-based security take advantage of security features in Vista, Microsoft's new OS.
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may1sep2

04/19/07 9:17 AM

#141560 RE: wavxmaster #141554

Wavexmaster, I guess cygnuscap showing up now

proves something big is going to happen.