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British Telecom Assigned Patent

Secure data recorder

British Telecommunications, Public Limited Company, London, Great Britain, has been assigned a patent (9,208,333) developed by Martin, Thomas, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates, for a “secure data recorder.

The abstract of the patent published by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office states: ”A method and apparatus for securely encrypting data is disclosed. Conventional protections against the loss or theft of sensitive data such as full disk encryption are not effective if the device is, or has recently been, running when captured or found because the keys used for full disk encryption will still be in memory and can be used to decrypt the data stored on the disk. Some devices, such as devices which gather sensitive data in use, must run in environments in which they might be captured by a person seeking access to the sensitive data already recorded by the device. An encryption method is proposed in which files on a recorder’s persistent memory are initialised with pseudo-random masking data whilst the recorder is in a relatively secure environment. One or more parameters which can be used to re-create the pseudo-random masking data are encrypted with a public key using a public-key encryption algorithm and stored on the recorder. The device’s memory is then purged to remove the one or more parameters. Later, when miming in a relatively insecure environment, the sensitive data is encrypted, (414) using a symmetric encryption algorithm, and combined, (418) with the masking data previously stored in the storage file. When the encrypted files are transferred to a reader device with access to the corresponding private key, the masking data can be recreated, the symmetric encryption reversed and the sensitive data recovered. However, an adversary without the private key cannot recreate the masking data, and is thus unable to recover the sensitive data even with the symmetric encryption key which he might successfully extract from the recorder’s volatile memory.

The patent application was filed on March 30, 2011 (13/638,417).

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