David Robinson
Microsoft
16 Papers
337 Citations
David Robinson is an academic researcher from Microsoft. The author has contributed to research in topics: Trusted Platform Module & Firmware. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 16 publications.
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Papers
Patent
Firmware-based trusted platform module for arm processor architectures and trustzone security extensions
Stefan Thom,Jeremiah Cox,David J. Linsley,Magnus Nystrom,Himanshu Raj,David Robinson,Stefan Saroiu,Rob Spiger,Alastair Wolman +8 more
- 29 Jul 2011
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a "firmware-based TPM" to ensure that secure code execution is isolated to prevent a wide variety of potential security breaches without the use of dedicated security processor hardware or silicon.
140
•Proceedings Article
fTPM: A Software-Only Implementation of a {TPM} Chip
Himanshu Raj,Stefan Saroiu,Alec Wolman,Ronald Aigner,Jeremiah Cox,Paul England,Chris Fenner,Kinshuman Kinshumann,Jork Loeser,Dennis Mattoon,Magnus Nystrom,David Robinson,Rob Spiger,Stefan Thom,David R. Wooten +14 more
- 12 Aug 2016
TL;DR: The design and implementation of a firmware-based TPM 2.0 (fTPM) leveraging ARM TrustZone is presented and a set of mechanisms needed for the fTPM that can be useful for building more sophisticated trusted applications beyond just a TPM are described.
Patent
Key management using trusted platform modules
Tolga Acar,Brian A. Lamacchia,Henry Nelson Jerez Morales,Lan Duy Nguyen,David Robinson,Talha Bin Tariq +5 more
- 30 Dec 2010
TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe techniques for distributed key management (DKM) in cooperation with Trusted Platform Modules (TPMs) and show that TPMs can be used to determine the set of trusted nodes to which TPM-encrypted secret keys can be distributed.
43
Patent
Data custodian and curation system
Hari Sivaramakrishnan,Roy Peter D'Souza,Lev Novik,Nino Bice,David Robinson +4 more
- 05 Jun 2012
TL;DR: A data custodian and curation system may store data from a data supplier in encrypted form and allow users to consume the data when the consumers obtain access to the data through an agreement.
32
Credo: Trusted Computing for Guest VMs with a Commodity Hypervisor
Himanshu Raj,David Robinson,Talha Bin Tariq,Paul England,Stefan Saroiu,Alec Wolman +5 more
- 16 Dec 2011
TL;DR: Experimental results from a prototype implementation based on Hyper-V demonstrate that Credo provides enhanced security guarantees to emancipated VMs at a modest cost, most of which is a one-time startup cost from a VM’s perspective, while adding only a small amount of code to a VM's TCB.