Patent Publication Number: US-7590853-B1

Title: Systems and methods using cryptography to protect secure computing environments

Description:
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATION 
   This is a continuation of application Ser. No. 11/454,072, filed Jun. 14, 2006, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/925,072, filed Aug. 6, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,120,802, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 09/678,830, filed Oct. 4, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,292,569, which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 08/689,754, filed Aug. 12, 1996, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,157,721, all of which are incorporated herein by reference. 

   This application is also related to application Ser. No. 08/388,107, filed 13 Feb. 1995, abandoned, which is also incorporated herein by reference. 
   FIELD OF THE INVENTION(S) 
   This invention relates to computer security, and more particularly to secure and/or protected computer execution environments. Still more specifically, the present invention relates to computer security techniques based at least in part on cryptography, that protect a computer processing environment against potentially harmful computer executables, programs and/or data; and to techniques for certifying load modules such as executable computer programs or fragments thereof as being authorized for use by a protected or secure processing environment. 
   BACKGROUND AND SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION(S) 
   Computers have become increasingly central to business, finance and other important aspects of our lives. It is now more important than ever to protect computers from “bad” or harmful computer programs. Unfortunately, since many of our most critical business, financial and governmental tasks now rely heavily on computers, dishonest people have a great incentive to use increasingly sophisticated and ingenious computer attacks. 
   Imagine, for example, if a dishonest customer of a major bank could reprogram the bank&#39;s computer so it adds to instead of subtracts from the customer&#39;s account—or diverts a penny to the customer&#39;s account from anyone else&#39;s bank deposit in excess of $10,000. If successful, such attacks would not only allow dishonest people to steal, but could also undermine society&#39;s confidence in the integrity and reliability of the banking system. 
   Terrorists can also try to attack us through our computers. We cannot afford to have harmful computer programs destroy the computers driving the greater San Francisco metropolitan air traffic controller network, the New York Stock Exchange, the life support systems of a major hospital, or the Northern Virginia metropolitan area fire and paramedic emergency dispatch service. 
   There are many different kinds of “bad” computer programs, which in general are termed “Trojan horses”—programs that cause a computer to act in a manner not intended by its operator, named after the famous wooden horse of Troy that delivered an attacking army disguised as an attractive gift. One of the most notorious kinds is so-called “computer viruses”—“diseases” that a computer can “catch” from another computer. A computer virus is a computer program that instructs the computer to do harmful or spurious things instead of useful things—and can also replicate itself to spread from one computer to another. Since the computer does whatever its instructions tell it to do, it will carry out the bad intent of a malicious human programmer who wrote the computer virus program—unless the computer is protected from the computer virus program. Special “anti-virus” protection software exists, but it unfortunately is only partially effective—for example, because new viruses can escape detection until they become widely known and recognized, and because sophisticated viruses can escape detection by masquerading as tasks the computer is supposed to be performing. 
   Computer security risks of all sorts—including the risks from computer viruses—have increased dramatically as computers have become increasingly connected to one another over the Internet and by other means. Increased computer connectivity provides increased capabilities, but also creates a host of computer security problems that haven&#39;t been fully solved. For example, electronic networks are an obvious path for spreading computer viruses. In October 1988, a university student used the Internet (a network of computer networks connected to millions of computers worldwide) to infect thousands of university and business computers with a self-replicating “worm” virus that took over the infected computers and caused them to execute the computer virus instead of performing the tasks they were supposed to perform. This computer virus outbreak (which resulted in a criminal prosecution) caused widespread panic throughout the electronic community. 
   Computer viruses are by no means the only computer security risk made even more significant by increased computer connectivity. For example, a significant percentage of the online electronic community has recently become committed to a new “portable” computer language called Java™ developed by Sun Microsystems of Mountain View, Calif. Java was designed to allow computers to interactively and dynamically download computer program code fragments (called “applets”) over an electronic network such as the internet, and execute the downloaded code fragments locally. Java&#39;s “download and execute” capability is valuable because it allows certain tasks to be performed locally on local equipment using local resources. For example, a user&#39;s computer could run a particularly computationally or data-intensive routine—relieving the provider&#39;s computer from having to run the task and/or eliminating the need to transmit large amounts of data over the communications path. 
   While Java&#39;s “download and execute” capability has great potential, it raises significant computer security concerns. For example, Java applets could be written to damage hardware, software or information on the recipient computer, make the computer unstable by depleting its resources, and/or access confidential information on the computer and send it to someone else without first getting the computer owner&#39;s permission. People have expended lots of time and effort trying to solve Java&#39;s security problems. To alleviate some of these concerns, Sun Microsystems has developed a Java interpreter providing certain built-in security features such as:
         a Java verifier that will not let an applet execute until the verifier verifies the applet doesn&#39;t violate certain rules,   a Java class loader that treats applets originating remotely differently from those originating locally,   a Java security manager that controls access to resources such as files and network access, and   promised to come soon—the use of digital signatures for authenticating applets.       

   Numerous security flaws have been found despite these techniques. Moreover, a philosophy underlying this overall security design is that a user will have no incentive to compromise the security of her own locally installed Java interpreter—and that any such compromise is inconsequential from a system security standpoint because only the user&#39;s own computer (and its contents) are at risk. This philosophy—which is typical of many security system designs—is seriously flawed in many useful electronic commerce contexts for reasons described below in connection with the above-referenced Ginter et al. patent specification. 
   The Ginter et al. specification describes a “virtual distribution environment” comprehensively providing overall systems and wide arrays of methods, techniques, structures and arrangements that enable secure, efficient electronic commerce and rights management, including on the Internet or other “Information Super Highway.” 
   The Ginter et al. patent disclosure describes, among other things, techniques for providing a secure, tamper resistant execution spaces within a “protected processing environment” for computer programs and data. The protected processing environment described in Ginter et al. may be hardware-based, software-based, or a hybrid. It can execute computer code the Ginter et al. disclosure refers to as “load modules.” See, for example, Ginter et al. FIG. 23 and corresponding text. These load modules—which can be transmitted from remote locations within secure cryptographic wrappers or “containers”—are used to perform the basic operations of the “virtual distribution environment.” Load modules may contain algorithms, data, cryptographic keys, shared secrets, and/or other information that permits a load module to interact with other system components (e.g., other load modules and/or computer programs operating in the same or different protected processing environment). For a load module to operate and interact as intended, it must execute without unauthorized modification and its contents may need to be protected from disclosure. 
   Unlike many other computer security scenarios, there may be a significant incentive for an owner of a Ginter et al. type protected processing environment to attack his or her own protected processing environment. For example:
         the owner may wish to “turn off” payment mechanisms necessary to ensure that people delivering content and other value receive adequate compensation; or   the owner may wish to defeat other electronic controls preventing him or her from performing certain tasks (for example, copying content without authorization); or   the owner may wish to access someone else&#39;s confidential information embodied within electronic controls present in the owner&#39;s protected processing environment; or   the owner may wish to change the identity of a payment recipient indicated within controls such that they receive payments themselves, or to interfere with commerce; or   the owner may wish to defeat the mechanism(s) that disable some or all functions when budget has been exhausted, or audit trails have not been delivered.       

   Security experts can often be heard to say that to competently do their job, they must “think like an attacker.” For example, a successful home security system installer must try to put herself in the place of a burglar trying to break in. Only by anticipating how a burglar might try to break into a house can the installer successfully defend the house against burglary. Similarly, computer security experts must try to anticipate the sorts of attacks that might be brought against a presumably secure computer system. 
   From this “think like an attacker” viewpoint, introducing a bogus load module is one of the strongest possible forms of attack (by a protected processing environment user or anyone else) on the virtual distribution environment disclosed in the Ginter et al. patent specification. Because load modules have access to internal protected data structures within protected processing environments and also (at least to an extent) control the results brought about by those protected processing environments, bogus load modules can (putting aside for the moment additional possible local protections such as addressing and/or ring protection and also putting aside system level fraud and other security related checks) perform almost any action possible in the virtual distribution environment without being subject to intended electronic controls. Especially likely attacks may range from straightforward changes to protected data (for example, adding budget, billing for nothing instead of the desired amount, etc.) to wholesale compromise (for example, using a load module to expose a protected processing environment&#39;s cryptographic keys). For at least these reasons, the methods for validating the origin and soundness of a load module are critically important. 
   The Ginter et al. patent specification discloses important techniques for securing protected processing environments against inauthentic load modules introduced by the computer owner, user, or any other party, including for example:
         Encrypting and authenticating load modules whenever they are shared between protected processing environments via a communications path outside of a tamper-resistant barrier and/or passed between different virtual distribution environment participants;   Using digital signatures to determine if load module executable content is intact and was created by a trusted source (i.e., one with a correct certificate for creating load modules);   Strictly controlling initiation of load module execution by use of encryption keys, digital signatures and/or tags;   Carefully controlling the process of creating, replacing, updating or deleting load modules; and   Maintaining shared secrets (e.g., cryptographic keys) within a tamper resistant enclosure that the owner of the electronic appliance cannot easily tamper with.       

   Although the Ginter et al. patent specification comprehensively solves a host of load module (and other) security related problems, any computer system—no matter how secure—can be “cracked” if enough time, money and effort is devoted to the project. Therefore, even a very secure system such as that disclosed in Ginter et al. can be improved to provide even greater security and protection against attack. 
   The present invention provides improved techniques for protecting secure computation and/or execution spaces (as one important but non-limiting example, the protected processing environments as disclosed in Ginter et al) from unauthorized (and potentially harmful) load modules or other “executables” or associated data. In one particular preferred embodiment, these techniques build upon, enhance and/or extend in certain respects, the load module security techniques, arrangements and systems provided in the Ginter et al. specification. 
   In accordance with one aspect provided by the present invention, one or more trusted verifying authorities validate load modules or other executables by analyzing and/or testing them. A verifying authority digitally “signs” and “certifies” those load modules or other executables it has verified (using a public key based digital signature and/or certificate based thereon, for example). 
   Protected execution spaces such as protected processing environments can be programmed or otherwise conditioned to accept only those load modules or other executables bearing a digital signature/certificate of an accredited (or particular) verifying authority. Tamper resistant barriers may be used to protect this programming or other conditioning. The assurance levels described below are a measure or assessment of the effectiveness with which this programming or other conditioning is protected. 
   A web of trust may stand behind a verifying authority. For example, a verifying authority may be an independent organization that can be trusted by all electronic value chain participants not to collaborate with any particular participant to the disadvantage of other participants. A given load module or other executable may be independently certified by any number of authorized verifying authority participants. If a load module or other executable is signed, for example, by five different verifying authority participants, a user will have (potentially) a higher likelihood of finding one that they trust. General commercial users may insist on several different certifiers, and government users, large corporations, and international trading partners may each have their own unique “web of trust” requirements. This “web of trust” prevents value chain participants from conspiring to defraud other value chain participants. 
   In accordance with another aspect provided by this invention, each load module or other executable has specifications associated with it describing the executable, its operations, content, and functions. Such specifications could be represented by any combination of specifications, formal mathematical descriptions that can be verified in an automated or other well-defined manner, or any other forms of description that can be processed, verified, and/or tested in an automated or other well-defined manner. The load module or other executable is preferably constructed using a programming language (e.g., languages such as Java and Python) and/or design/implementation methodology (e.g., Gypsy, FDM) that can facilitate automated analysis, validation, verification, inspection, and/or testing. 
   A verifying authority analyzes, validates, verifies, inspects, and/or tests the load module or other executable, and compares its results with the specifications associated with the load module or other executable. A verifying authority may digitally sign or certify only those load modules or other executables having proper specifications—and may include the specifications as part of the material being signed or certified. 
   A verifying authority may instead, or in addition, selectively be given the responsibility for analyzing the load module and generating a specification for it. Such a specification could be reviewed by the load module&#39;s originator and/or any potential users of the load module. 
   A verifying authority may selectively be given the authority to generate an additional specification for the load module, for example by translating a formal mathematical specification to other kinds of specifications. This authority could be granted, for example, by a load module originator wishing to have a more accessible, but verified (certified), description of the load module for purposes of informing other potential users of the load module. 
   Additionally, a verifying authority may selectively be empowered to modify the specifications to make it accurate—but may refuse to sign or certify load modules or other executables that are harmful or dangerous irrespective of the accuracy of their associated specifications. The specifications may in some instances be viewable by ultimate users or other value chain participants—providing a high degree of assurance that load modules or other executables are not subverting the system and/or the legitimate interest of any participant in an electronic value chain the system supports. 
   In accordance with another aspect provided by the present invention, an execution environment protects itself by deciding—based on digital signatures, for example—which load modules or other executables it is willing to execute. A digital signature allows the execution environment to test both the authenticity and the integrity of the load module or other executables, as well permitting a user of such executables to determine their correctness with respect to their associated specifications or other description of their behavior, if such descriptions are included in the verification process. 
   A hierarchy of assurance levels may be provided for different protected processing environment security levels. Load modules or other executables can be provided with digital signatures associated with particular assurance levels. Appliances assigned to particular assurance levels can protect themselves from executing load modules or other executables associated with different assurance levels. Different digital signatures and/or certificates may be used to distinguish between load modules or other executables intended for different assurance levels. This strict assurance level hierarchy provides a framework to help ensure that a more trusted environment can protect itself from load modules or other executables exposed to environments with different work factors (e.g., less trusted or tamper resistant environments). This can be used to provide a high degree of security compartmentalization that helps protect the remainder of the system should parts of the system become compromised. 
   For example, protected processing environments or other secure execution spaces that are more impervious to tampering (such as those providing a higher degree of physical security) may use an assurance level that isolates it from protected processing environments or other secure execution spaces that are relatively more susceptible to tampering (such as those constructed solely by software executing on a general purpose digital computer in a non-secure location). 
   A verifying authority may digitally sign load modules or other executables with a digital signature that indicates or implies assurance level. A verifying authority can use digital signature techniques to distinguish between assurance levels. As one example, each different digital signature may be encrypted using a different verification key and/or fundamentally different encryption, one-way hash and/or other techniques. A protected processing environment or other secure execution space protects itself by executing only those load modules or other executables that have been digitally signed for its corresponding assurance level. 
   The present invention may use a verifying authority and the digital signatures it provides to compartmentalize the different electronic appliances depending on their level of security (e.g., work factor or relative tamper resistance). In particular, a verifying authority and the digital signatures it provides isolate appliances with significantly different work factors—preventing the security of high work factor appliances from collapsing into the security of low work factor appliances due to free exchange of load modules or other executables. 
   Encryption can be used in combination with the assurance level scheme discussed above to ensure that load modules or other executables can be executed only in specific environments or types of environments. The secure way to ensure that a load module or other executable can&#39;t execute in a particular environment is to ensure that the environment doesn&#39;t have the key(s) necessary to decrypt it. Encryption can rely on multiple public keys and/or algorithms to transport basic key(s). Such encryption protects the load module or other executable from disclosure to environments (or assurance levels of environments) other than the one it is intended to execute in. 
   In accordance with another aspect provided by this invention, a verifying authority can digitally sign a load module or other executable with several different digital signatures and/or signature schemes. A protected processing environment or other secure execution space may require a load module or other executable to present multiple digital signatures before accepting it. An attacker would have to “break” each (all) of the several digital signatures and/or signature schemes to create an unauthorized load module or other executable that would be accepted by the protected processing environment or other secure execution space. Different protected processing environments (secure execution spaces) might examine different subsets of the multiple digital signatures—so that compromising one protected processing environment (secure execution space) will not compromise all of them. As an optimization, a protected processing environment or other secure execution space might verify only one of the several digital signatures (for example, chosen at random each time an executable is used)—thereby speeding up the digital signature verification while still maintaining a high degree of security. 

   
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     These and other features and advantages provided in accordance with this invention may be better and more completely understood by referring to the following detailed description of example preferred embodiments in conjunction with the drawings, of which: 
       FIG. 1  illustrates how defective or bogus load modules can wreak havoc in the electronic community; 
       FIG. 2  shows an example verification authority that protects the electronic community from unauthorized load modules; 
       FIG. 3  shows how a protected processing environment can distinguish between load modules that have been approved by a verifying authority and those that have not been approved; 
       FIG. 4  shows an example process a verifying authority may perform to authenticate load modules; 
       FIG. 5  shows how a verifying authority can create a certifying digital signature; 
       FIG. 6  shows how a protected processing environment can securely authenticate a verifying authority&#39;s digital signature to guarantee the integrity of the corresponding load module; 
       FIG. 7  shows how several different digital signatures can be applied to the same load module; 
       FIG. 8  shows how a load module can be distributed with multiple digital signatures; 
       FIG. 8A  shows how key management can be used to compartmentalize protected processing environments; 
       FIG. 9  shows how a load module can be segmented and each segment protected with a different digital signature; 
       FIGS. 10A-10C  show how different assurance level electronic appliances can be provided with different cryptographic keys for authenticating verifying authority digital signatures; 
       FIGS. 11A-11C  show how a verifying authority can use different digital signatures to designate the same or different load modules as being appropriate for execution by different assurance level electronic appliances; 
       FIGS. 12 ,  13  and  13 A show how assurance level digital signatures can be used to isolate electronic appliances or appliance types based on work factor and/or tamper resistance to reduce overall security risks; and 
       FIG. 14  shows example overall steps that may be performed within an electronic system (such as, for example, a virtual distribution environment) to test, certify, distribute and use executables. 
   

   DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLE EMBODIMENTS 
     FIG. 1  shows how defective, bogus and/or unauthorized computer information can wreak havoc within an electronic system  50 . In this example, provider  52  is authorized to produce and distribute “load modules”  54  for use by different users or consumers  56 .  FIG. 1  shows “load module”  54  as a complicated looking machine part for purposes of illustration only; the load module preferably comprises one or more computer instructions and/or data elements used to assist, allow, prohibit, direct, control or facilitate at least one task performed at least in part by an electronic appliance such as a computer. For example, load module  54  may comprise all or part of an executable computer program and/or associated data (“executable”), and may constitute a sequence of instructions or steps that bring about a certain result within a computer or other computation element. 
     FIG. 1  shows a number of electronic appliances  61  such as, for example, a set top box or home media player  58 , a personal computer  60 , and a multi-media player  62 . Each of appliances  58 ,  60 ,  62  may include a secure execution space. One particular example of a secure execution space is a “protected processing environment”  108  of the type shown in Ginter et al. (see  FIGS. 6-12 ) and described in associated text. Protected processing environments  108  provide a secure execution environment in which appliances  58 ,  60 ,  62  may securely execute load modules  54  to perform useful tasks. For example:
         Provider  52  might produce a load module  54   a  for use by the protected processing environment  108 A within set top box or home media player  58 . Load module  54   a  could, for example, enable the set top box/home media player  58  to play a movie, concert or other interesting program, charge users  56   a  a “pay per view” fee, and ensure that the fee is paid to the appropriate rights holder (for example, the film studio, concert promoter or other organization that produced the program material).   Provider  52  might produce another load module  54   b  for delivery to personal computer  60 &#39;s protected processing environment  108 B. The load module  54   b  might enable personal computer  60  to perform a financial transaction, such as, for example, home banking, a stock trade or an income tax payment or reporting.   Provider  52  could produce a load module  54   c  for delivery to multi-media player  62 &#39;s protected processing environment  108   c . This load module  54   c  might allow user  56   c  to view a particular multi-media presentation while preventing the user from making a copy of the presentation—or it could control a portion of a transaction (e.g. a meter that records usage, and is incorporated into a larger transaction involving other load modules associated with interacting with a multi-media piece). (As described in the Ginter et al. specification, load modules associated with the financial portion of a transaction, for example, may often be self contained and independent).       
     FIG. 1  also shows an unauthorized and/or disreputable load module provider  64 . Unauthorized provider  64  knows how to make load modules that look a lot like the load modules produced by authorized load module provider  52 —but are defective or even destructive. Unless precautions are taken, the unauthorized load module  54   d  made by unauthorized producer  64  will be able to run on protected processing environments  108  within appliances  58 ,  60  and  62 , and may cause serious harm to users  56  and/or to the integrity of system  50 . For example:
         unauthorized provider  64  could produce a load module  54   d  that is quite similar to authorized load module  54   a  intended to be used by set top box or home media player  58 . The unauthorized load module  54   d  might allow protected processing environment  108 A within set top box/home media player  58  to present the very same program material—but divert some or all of the user&#39;s payment to unauthorized producer  64 —thereby defrauding the rights holders in the program material the users watch.   Unauthorized provider  64  might produce an unauthorized version of load module  54   b  that could, if run by personal computer  60 &#39;s protected processing environment  108   b , disclose the user  64   b &#39;s bank and credit card account numbers to unauthorized provider  64  and/or divert electronic or other funds to the unauthorized provider.   Unauthorized provider  64  could produce an unauthorized version of load module  54   c  that could damage the protected processing environment  108   c  within multi media player  62 —erasing data it needs for its operation and making it unusable. Alternatively, an unauthorized version of load module  54   c  could defeat the copy protection provided by multi media player  62 &#39;s protected processing environment, causing the makers of multi media programs to lose substantial revenues through unauthorized copying—or defeat or alter the part of the transaction provided by the load module (e.g., billing, metering, maintaining an audit trail, etc.)       
     FIG. 2  shows how a verifying authority  100  can prevent the problems shown in  FIG. 1 . In this example, authorized provider  52  submits load modules  54  to verifying authority  100 . Verifying authority  100  carefully analyzes the load modules  54  (see  102 ), testing them to make sure they do what they are supposed to do and do not compromise or harm system  50 . If a load module  54  passes the tests verifying authority  100  subjects it to, a verifying authority may affix a digital “seal of approval” (see  104 ) to the load module. 
   Protected processing environments  108  can use this digital “seal of approval”  106  (which may comprise one or more “digital signatures”) to distinguish between authorized and unauthorized load modules  54 .  FIG. 3  illustrates how an electronic protected processing environment  108  can use and rely on a verifying authority&#39;s digital seal of approval  106 . In this example, the protected processing environment  108  can distinguish between authorized and unauthorized load modules  54  by examining the load module to see whether it bears the seal of verifying authority  100 . Protected processing environment  108  will execute the load module  54   a  with its processor  110  only if the load module bears a verifying authority&#39;s seal  106 . Protected processing environment  108  discards and does not use any load module  54  that does not bear this seal  106 . In this way, protected processing environment  108  securely protects itself against unauthorized load modules  54  such as, for example, the defective load module  54   d  made by disreputable load module provider  64 . 
     FIG. 4  shows the analysis and digital signing steps  102 ,  104  performed by verifying authority  100  in this example. Provider  54  may provide, with each load module  54 , associated specifications  110  identifying the load module and describing the functions the load module performs. In this example, these specifications  110  are illustrated as a manufacturing tag, but preferably comprises a data file associated with and/or attached to the load module  54 . 
   Verifying authority  100  uses an analyzing tool(s)  112  to analyze and test load module  54  and determine whether it performs as specified by its associated specifications  110 —that is, whether the specifications are both accurate and complete.  FIG. 4  illustrates an analysis tool  112  as a magnifying glass; verifying authority  100  may not rely on visual inspection only, but instead preferably uses one or more computer-based software testing techniques and/or tools to verify that the load module performs as expected, matches specifications  110 , is not a “virus,” and includes no significant detectable “bugs” or other harmful functionality. See for example Pressman,  Software Engineering: A Practitioner&#39;s Approach  (3d Ed., McGraw-Hill 1992) at chapters 18 and 19 (“Software Testing Techniques”) (pages 595-661) and the various books and papers referenced there. Although it has been said that “testing can show only the presence of bugs, not their absence,” such testing (in addition to ensuring that the load module  54  satisfies its specifications  110 ) can provide added degrees of assurance that the load module isn&#39;t harmful and will work as it is supposed to. 
   Verifying authority  100  is preferably a trusted, independent third party such as an impartial, well respected independent testing laboratory. Therefore, all participants in an electronic transaction involving load module  54  can trust a verifying authority  100  as performing its testing and analysis functions competently and completely objectively and impartially. As described above, there may be several different verifying authorities  100  that together provide a “web of trust”. Several different verifying authorities may each verify and digitally sign the same load module—increasing the likelihood that a particular value chain participant will trust one of them and decreasing the likelihood of collusion or fraud. Electronic value chain participants may rely upon different verifying authorities  100  to certify different types of load modules. For example, one verifying authority  100  trusted by and known to financial participants might verify load modules relating to financial aspects of a transaction (e.g., billing), whereas another verifying authority  100 ′ trusted by and known to participants involved in using the “information exhaust” provided by an electronic transaction might be used to verify load modules relating to usage metering aspects of the same transaction. 
   Once verifying authority  100  is satisfied with load module  54 , it affixes its digital “seal of approval”  106  to the load module.  FIG. 4  illustrates the digital sealing process as being performed by a stamp  114 —but in the preferred embodiment the digital sealing process is actually performed by creating a “digital signature” using a well known process. See Schneier,  Applied Cryptography  (2d Ed. John Wiley &amp; Sons 1996) at Chapter 20 (pages 483-502). This digital signature, certificate or seal creation process is illustrated in  FIG. 5 . 
   In the  FIG. 5  process, load module  54  (along with specifications  110  if desired) is processed to yield a “message digest”  116  using a conventional one-way hash function selected to provide an appropriate resistance to algorithmic attack. See, for example, the transformation processes discussed in the Schneier text at Chapter 18, pages 429-455. A one-way hash function  115  provides a “fingerprint” (message digest  116 ) that is unique to load module  54 . The one-way hash function transforms the contents of load module  54  into message digest  116  based on a mathematical function. This one-way hash mathematical function has the characteristic that it is easy to calculate message digest  116  from load module  54 , but it is hard (computationally infeasible) to calculate load module  54  starting from message digest  116  and it is also hard (computationally infeasible) to find another load module  54 ′ that will transform to the same message digest  116 . There are many potential candidate functions (e.g., MD5, SHA), families of functions (e.g., MD5, or SHA with different internal constants), and keyed functions (e.g., message authentication codes based on block ciphers such as DES) that may be employed as one-way hash functions in this scheme. Different functions may have different cryptographic strengths and weaknesses so that techniques which may be developed to defeat one of them are not necessarily applicable to others. 
   Message digest  116  may then be encrypted using asymmetric key cryptography.  FIG. 5  illustrates this encryption operation using the metaphor of a strong box  118 . The message digest  116  is placed into strong box  118 , and the strongbox is locked with a lock  120  having two key slots opened by different (“asymmetrical”) keys. A first key  122  (sometimes called the “private” key) is used to lock the lock. A second (different) key  124  (sometimes called the “public” key) must be used to open the lock once the lock has been locked with the first key. The encryption algorithm and key length is selected so that it is computationally infeasible to calculate first key  122  given access to second key  124 , the public key encryption algorithm, the clear text message digest  116 , and the encrypted digital signature  106 . There are many potential candidate algorithms for this type of asymmetric key cryptography (e.g., RSA, DSA, El Gamal, Elliptic Curve Encryption). Different algorithms may have different cryptographic strengths and weaknesses so that techniques which may be developed to defeat one of them are not necessarily applicable to others. 
   In this case the first key is owned by verifying authority  100  and is kept highly secure (for example, using standard physical and procedural measures typically employed to keep an important private key secret while preventing it from being lost). Once message digest  116  is locked into strong box  118  using the first key  122  the strong box can be opened only by using the corresponding second key  124 . Note that other items (e.g., further identification information, a time/date stamp, etc.) can also be placed within strong box  106 . 
     FIG. 6  shows how a protected processing environment  108  “authenticates” the digital signature  106  created by the  FIG. 5  process. Second key  124  and the one-way hash algorithm are first securely provided to the protected processing environment. For example, a secure key exchange protocol can be used as described in connection with FIG. 64 of the Ginter et al. patent specification. Public key cryptography allows second key  124  to be made public without compromising first key  122 . However, in this example, protected processing environment  108  preferably keeps the second key  124  (and, if desired, also the one-way hash algorithm and/or its associated key) secret to further increase security. 
   Maintaining “public” verification key  124  as a secret within tamper resistant protected processing environment  108  greatly complicates the job of generating bogus digital signatures  106 . If the attacker does not possess second key  124 , the difficulty of an algorithmic attack or cryptanalytic attack on the verification digital signature algorithm is significantly increased, and the attacker might be reduced to exhaustive search (brute force) type attacks which would be even less practical because the search trials would require attempting to present a bogus load module  54  to protected processing environment  108 —which, after a few such attempts is likely to refuse all further attempts. Keeping second key  124  secret also requires a multi-disciplinary attack: an attacker must both (A) extract the secret from protected processing environment  108 , and (B) attack the algorithm. It may be substantially less likely that a single attacker may have expertise in each of these two specialized disciplines. 
   In addition, maintaining the “public” key within a tamper-resistant environment forecloses the significant threat that the owner of protected processing environment  108  may himself attack the environment. For example, if the owner could replace the appropriate “public” key  124  with his own substitute public key, the owner could force the protected processing environment  108  to execute load modules  54  of his own design—thereby compromising the interests of others in enforcing their own controls within the owner&#39;s protected processing environment. For example, the owner could turn off the control that required him to pay for watching or prohibited him from copying content. Since protected processing environment  108  can support a “virtual business presence” by parties other than the owner, it is important for the protected processing environment to be protected against attacks from the owner. 
   The load module  54  and its associated digital signature  106  is then delivered to the protected processing environment  108 . (These items can be provided together at the same time, independently, or at different times.) Protected processing environment  115  applies the same one way hash transformation on load module  54  that a verifying authority  100  applied. Since protected processing environment  108  starts with the same load module  54  and uses the same one-way hash function  115 , it should generate the same message digest  116 ′. 
   Protected processing environment  108  then decrypts digital signature  106  using the second key  124 —i.e., it opens strongbox  118  to retrieve the message digest  116  a verifying authority  100  placed in there. Protected processing environment  108  compares the version of message digest  116  it obtains from the digital signature  106  with the version of message digest  116 ′ it calculates itself from load module  54  using the one way hash transformation  115 . The message digests  116 ,  116 ′ should be identical. If they do not match, digital signature  106  is not authentic or load module  54  has been changed—and protected processing environment  108  rejects load module  54 . 
     FIG. 7  shows that multiple digital signatures  106 ( 1 ),  106 ( 2 ), . . .  106 (N) can be created for the same load module  54 . For example:
         one digital signature  106 ( 1 ) can be created by encrypting message digest  116  with a “private” key  122 ( 1 ),   another (different) digital signature  106 ( 2 ) can be created by encrypting the message digest  116  with a different “private” key  122 ( 2 ), possibly employing a different signature algorithm, and   a still different digital signature  106 (N) can be generated by encrypting the message digest using a still different “private” key  122 (N), possibly employing a different signature algorithm.       
   The public key  124 ( 1 ) corresponding to private key  122 ( 1 ) acts only to decrypt (authenticate) digital signature  106 ( 1 ). Similarly, digital signature  106 ′ can only be decrypted (authenticated) using public key  124 ( 2 ) corresponding to the private  122 ( 2 ). Public key  124 ( 1 ) will not “unlock” digital signature  106 ( 2 ) and public key  124 ( 2 ) will not “unlock” digital signature  106 ( 1 ). 
   Different digital signatures  106 ( 1 ),  106 (N) can also be made by using different one way hash functions  115  and/or different encryption algorithms. As shown in  FIG. 8 , a load module  54  may have multiple different types of digital signatures  106  associated with it. Requiring a load module  54  to present, to a protected processing environment  108 , multiple digital signatures  106  generated using fundamentally different techniques decreases the risk that an attacker can successfully manufacture a bogus load module  54 . 
   For example, as shown in  FIG. 8 , the same load module  54  might be digitally signed using three different private keys  122 , cryptographic algorithms, and/or hash algorithms. If a given load module  54  has multiple distinct digital signatures  106  each computed using a fundamentally different technique, the risk of compromise is substantially lowered. A single algorithmic advance is unlikely to result in simultaneous success against both (or multiple) cryptographic algorithms. The two digital signature algorithms in widespread use today (RSA and DSA) are based on distinct mathematical problems (factoring in the case of RSA, discrete logs for DSA). The most currently popular one-way hash functions (MD4/MD5 and SHA) have similar internal structures, possibly increasing the likelihood that a successful attack against one would lead to a success against another. However, hash functions can be derived from any number of different block ciphers (e.g., SEAL, IDEA, triple-DES) with different internal structures; one of these might be a good candidate to complement MD5 or SHA. 
   Multiple signatures as shown in  FIG. 8  impose a cost of additional storage for the signatures  106  in each protected load module  54 , additional code in the protected processing environment  108  to implement additional algorithms, and additional time to verify the digital signatures (as well as to generate them at verification time). As an optimization to the use of multiple keys or algorithms, an appliance  61  might verify only a subset of several signatures associated with a load module  54  (chosen at random) each time the load module is used. This would speed up signature verification while maintaining a high probability of detection. For example, suppose there are one hundred “private” verification keys, and each load module  54  carries one hundred digital signatures. Suppose each protected processing environment  108 , on the other hand, knows only a few (e.g., ten) of these corresponding “public” verification keys randomly selected from the set. A successful attack on that particular protected processing environment  108  would permit it to be compromised and would also compromise any other protected processing environment possessing and using precisely that same set of ten keys. However, it would not compromise most other protected processing environments—since they would employ a different subset of the keys used by verifying authority  100 . 
     FIG. 8A  shows a simplified example of different processing environments  108 ( 1 ), . . . ,  108 (N) possessing different subsets of “public” keys used for digital signature authentication—thereby compartmentalizing the protected processing environments based on key management and availability. The  FIG. 8A  illustration shows each protected processing environment  108  having only one “public” key  124  that corresponds to one of the digital signatures  106  used to “sign” load module  54 . As explained above, any number of digital signatures  106  may be used to sign the load module  54 —and different protected processing environment  108  may possess any subset of corresponding “public” keys. 
     FIG. 9  shows that a load module  54  may comprise multiple segments  55 ( 1 ),  55 ( 2 ),  55 ( 3 ) signed using different digital signatures  106 . For example:
         a first load module segment  55 ( 1 ) might be signed using a digital signature  106 ( 1 );   a second load module segment  55 ( 2 ) might be digitally signed using a second digital signature  106 ( 2 ); and   a third load module segment  55 ( 3 ) might be signed using a third digital signature  106 ( 3 ).       
   These three signatures  55 ( 1 ),  55 ( 2 ),  55 ( 3 ) could all be affixed by the same verifying authority  100 , or they could be affixed by three different verifying authorities (providing a “web of trust”). (In another model, a load module is verified in its entirety by multiple parties—if a user trusts any of them, she can trust the load module.) A protected processing environment  108  would need to have all three corresponding “public” keys  124 ( 1 ),  124 ( 2 ),  124 ( 3 ) to authenticate the entire load module  54 —or the different load module segments could be used by different protected processing environments possessing the corresponding different keys  124 ( 1 ),  124 ( 2 ),  124 ( 3 ). Different signatures  55 ( 1 ),  55 ( 2 ),  55 ( 3 ) could be calculated using different signature and/or one-way hash algorithms to increase the difficulty of defeating them by cryptanalytic attack. 
   Assurance Levels 
   Verifying authority  100  can use different digital signing techniques to provide different “assurance levels” for different kinds of electronic appliances  61  having different “work factors” or levels of tamper resistance.  FIGS. 10A-10C  show an example assurance level hierarchy providing three different assurance levels for different electronic appliance types:
         Assurance level I might be used for an electronic appliance(s)  61  whose protected processing environment  108  is based on software techniques that may be somewhat resistant to tampering. An example of an assurance level I electronic appliance  61 A might be a general purpose personal computer that executes software to create protected processing environment  108 .   An assurance level II electronic appliance  61 B may provide a protected processing environment  108  based on a hybrid of software security techniques and hardware-based security techniques. An example of an assurance level II electronic appliance  61 B might be a general purpose personal computer equipped with a hardware integrated circuit secure processing unit (“SPU”) that performs some secure processing outside of the SPU (see Ginter et al. patent disclosure  FIG. 10  and associated text). Such a hybrid arrangement might be relatively more resistant to tampering than a software-only implementation.   The assurance level III appliance  61 C shown is a general purpose personal computer equipped with a hardware-based secure processing unit  132  providing and completely containing protected processing environment  108  (see Ginter et al.  FIGS. 6 and 9  for example). A silicon-based special purpose integrated circuit security chip is relatively more tamper-resistant than implementations relying on software techniques for some or all of their tamper-resistance.       

   In this example, verifying authority  100  digitally signs load modules  54  using different digital signature techniques (for example, different “private” keys  122 ) based on assurance level. The digital signatures  106  applied by verifying authority  100  thus securely encode the same (or different) load module  54  for use by appropriate corresponding assurance level electronic appliances  61 . 
   Assurance level in this example may be assigned to a particular protected processing environment  108  at initialization (e.g., at the factory in the case of hardware-based secure processing units). Assigning assurance level at initialization time facilitates the use of key management (e.g., secure key exchange protocols) to enforce isolation based on assurance level. For example, since establishment of assurance level is done at initialization time, rather than in the field in this example, the key exchange mechanism can be used to provide new keys (assuming an assurance level has been established correctly). 
   Within a protected processing environment  108 , as shown in  FIGS. 10A-10C , different assurance levels may be assigned to each separate instance of a channel (see Ginter et al.,  FIG. 15 ) contained therein. In this way, each secure processing environment and host event processing environment (see Ginter et al.,  FIG. 10  and associated description) contained within an instance of a PPE  108  may contain multiple instances of a channel, each with independent and different assurance levels. The nature of this feature of the invention permits the separation of different channels within a PPE  108  from each other, each channel possibly having identical, shared, or independent sets of load modules for each specific channel limited solely to the resources and services authorized for use by that specific channel. In this way, the security of the entire PPE is enhanced and the effect of security breaches within each channel is compartmentalized solely to that channel. 
   As shown in  FIGS. 11A-11C , different digital signatures and/or signature algorithms corresponding to different “assurance levels” may be used to allow a particular execution environment to protect itself from particular load modules  54  that are accessible to other classes or “assurance levels” of electronic appliances. As shown in  FIGS. 11A-11C :
         A protected processing environment(s) of assurance level I protects itself (themselves) by executing only load modules  54  sealed with an assurance level I digital signature  106 (I). Protected processing environment(s)  108  having an associated assurance level I is (are) securely issued a public key  124 (I) that can “unlock” the level I digital signature.   Similarly, a protected processing environment(s) of assurance level II protects itself (themselves) by executing only the same (or different) load module  54  sealed with a “Level II” digital signature  106 (II). Such a protected processing environment  108  having an associated corresponding assurance level II possess a public key  124 (II) used to “unlock” the level II digital signature.   A protected processing environment(s)  108  of assurance level III protects itself (themselves) by executing only load modules  54  having a digital signature  106 (III) for assurance level III. Such an assurance level III protected processing environment  108  possesses a corresponding assurance level  3  public key  124 (III). Key management encryption (not signature) keys can allow this protection to work securely.       

   In this example, electronic appliances  61  of different assurance levels can communicate with one another and pass load modules  54  between one another—an important feature providing a scaleable virtual distribution environment involving all sorts of different appliances (e.g., personal computers, laptop computers, handheld computers, television sets, media players, set top boxes, internet browser appliances, smart cards, mainframe computers, etc.) The present invention uses verifying authority  100  and the digital signatures it provides to compartmentalize the different electronic appliances depending on their level of security (e.g., work factor or relative tamper resistance). In particular, verifying authority  100  and the digital signatures it provides isolate appliances with significantly different work factors—preventing the security of high work factor appliances from collapsing into the security of low work factor appliances due to free exchange of load modules  54 . 
   In one example, verifying authority  100  may digitally sign identical copies of load module  54  for use by different classes or “assurance levels” of electronic appliances  61 . If the sharing of a load module  54  between different electronic appliances is regarded as an open communications channel between the protected processing environments  108  of the two appliances, it becomes apparent that there is a high degree of risk in permitting such sharing to occur. In particular, the extra security assurances and precautions of the more trusted environment are collapsed into the those of the less trusted environment because an attacker who compromises a load module within a less trusted environment is then be able to launch the same load module to attack the more trusted environment. Hence, although compartmentalization based on encryption and key management can be used to restrict certain kinds of load modules  54  to execute only on certain types of electronic appliances  61 , a significant application in this context is to compartmentalize the different types of electronic appliances and thereby allow an electronic appliance to protect itself against load modules  54  of different assurance levels. 
     FIG. 12  emphasizes this isolation using the illustrative metaphor of desert islands. It shows how the assurance levels can be used to isolate and compartmentalize any number of different types of electronic appliances  61 . In this example:
         Personal computer  60 ( 1 ) providing a software-only protected processing environment  108  may be at assurance level I;   Media player  400 ( 1 ) providing a software-only based protected processing environment may be at assurance level II;   Server  402 ( 1 ) providing a software-only based protected processing environment may be at assurance level III;   Support service  404 ( 1 ) providing a software-only based protected processing environment may be at assurance level IV;   Personal computer  60 ( 2 ) providing a hybrid software and hardware protected processing environment  108  may be at assurance level V;   Media player  400 ( 2 ) providing a hybrid software and hardware protected processing environment may be at assurance level VI;   Server  402 ( 2 ) providing a software and hardware hybrid protected processing environment may be at assurance level VII;   Support service  404 ( 2 ) providing a software and hardware hybrid protected processing environment may be at assurance level VIII; and   Personal computer  60 ( 3 ) providing a hardware-only protected processing environment  108  may be at assurance level IX;   Media player  400 ( 3 ) providing a hardware-only protected processing environment may be at assurance level X;   Server  402 ( 3 ) providing a hardware-only based protected processing environment may be at assurance level XI;   Support service  404 ( 3 ) providing a hardware-only based protected processing environment may be at assurance level XII.       
   In accordance with this feature of the invention, verifying authority  100  supports all of these various categories of digital signatures, and system  50  uses key management to distribute the appropriate verification keys to different assurance level devices. For example, verifying authority  100  may digitally sign a particular load module  54  such that only hardware-only based server(s)  402 ( 3 ) at assurance level Xl may authenticate it. This compartmentalization prevents any load module executable on hardware-only servers  402 ( 3 ) from executing on any other assurance level appliance (for example, software-only protected processing environment based support service  404 ( 1 )). 
   To simplify key management and distribution, execution environments having significantly similar work factors can be classified in the same assurance level.  FIG. 13  shows one example hierarchical assurance level arrangement. In this example, less secure “software only” protected processing environment  108  devices are categorized as assurance level I, somewhat more secure “software and hardware hybrid” protected processing environment appliances are categorized as assurance level II, and more trusted “hardware only” protected processing environment devices are categorized as assurance level III. 
   To show this type of isolation,  FIG. 13A  shows three example corresponding “desert islands.” Desert island I is “inhabited” by personal computers  61 A providing a software-only protected processing environment. The software-only protected processing environment based personal computers  60 ( 1 ) “inhabit” desert island I are all of the same assurance level—and thus will each authenticate (and may thus each use) an assurance level I load module  54   a . Desert island II is “inhabited” by assurance level II hybrid software and hardware protected processing environment personal computers  61 B. These assurance level II personal computers will each authenticate (and may thus each execute) an assurance level II load module  54   b . Similarly, a desert island III is “inhabited” by assurance level III personal computers  61 C providing hardware-only protected processing environments. These assurance level III devices  61 C may each authenticate and execute an assurance level III load module  54   c.    
   The “desert islands” are created by the use of different digital signatures on each of load modules  54   a ,  54   b ,  54   c . In this example, all of the appliances  61  may freely communicate with one another (as indicated by the barges—which represent electronic or other communications between the various devices. However, because particular assurance level load modules  54  will be authenticated only by appliances  60  having corresponding assurance levels, the load modules cannot leave their associated “desert island”—providing isolation between the different assurance level execution environments. More specifically, a particular assurance level appliance  61  thus protects itself from using a load module  54  of a different assurance level. Digital signatures (and/or signature algorithms)  106  in this sense create the isolated “desert islands” shown—since they allow execution environments to protect themselves from “off island” load modules  54  of different assurance levels. 
   A load module or other executable may be certified for multiple assurance levels. Different digital signatures may be used to certify the same load module or other executable for different respective assurance levels. The load module or other executable could also be encrypted differently (e.g. using different keys to encrypt the load module) based on assurance level. If a load module is encrypted differently for different assurance levels, and the keys and/or algorithms that are used to decrypt such load modules are only distributed to environments of the same assurance level, an additional measure of security is provided. The risk associated with disclosing the load module or other executable contents (e.g., by decrypting encrypted code before execution) in a lower assurance environment does not compromise the security of higher assurance level systems directly, but it may help the attacker learn how the load module or other executable works and how to encrypt them—which can be important in making bogus load modules or other executables (although not in certifying them—since certification requires keys that would only become available to an attacker who has compromised the keys of a corresponding appropriate assurance level environment). Commercially, it may be important for administrative ease and consistency to take this risk. In other cases, it will not be (e.g. provider sensitivities, government uses, custom functions, etc.) 
     FIG. 14  shows an example sequence of steps that may be performed in an overall process provided by these inventions. To begin the overall process, a load module provider  52  may manufacture a load module and associated specifications ( FIG. 14 , block  502 ). Provider  52  may then submit the load module and associated specifications to verifying authority  100  for verification ( FIG. 14 , block  504 ). Verifying authority  100  may analyze, test, and/or otherwise validate the load module against the specifications ( FIG. 14 , block  506 ), and determine whether the load module satisfies the specifications. 
   If the load module is found to satisfy its specifications, a verifying authority  100  determines whether it is authorized to generate one or more new specifications for the load module ( FIG. 14 , block  509 ). If it is authorized and this function has been requested (“Y” exit to decision block  509 ), a verifying authority generates specifications and associates them with the load module ( FIG. 14 , block  514 ). 
   If the load module fails the test (“N” exit to decision block  508 ), verifying authority  100  determines whether it is authorized and able to create new specifications corresponding to the actual load module performance, and whether it is desirable to create the conforming specifications ( FIG. 14 , decision block  510 ). If verifying authority  100  decides not to make new specifications (“N” exit to decision block  510 ), verifying authority returns the load module to provider  52  (block  512 ) and the process ends. On the other hand, if verifying authority  100  determines that it is desirable to make new specifications and it is able and authorized to do so, a verifying authority  100  may make new specifications that conform to the load module (“Y” exit to decision block  510 ; block  514 ). 
   A verifying authority  100  may then digitally sign the load module  54  to indicate approval ( FIG. 14 , block  516 ). This step  516  may involve applying multiple digital signatures and/or a selection of the appropriate digital signatures to use in order to restrict the load module to particular “assurance levels” of electronic appliances as discussed above. Verifying authority may then determine the distribution of the load module ( FIG. 14 , block  518 ). This “determine distribution” step may involve, for example, determining who the load module should be distributed to (e.g., provider  52 , support services  404 , a load module repository operated by a verifying authority, etc.) and/or what should be distributed (e.g., the load module plus corresponding digital signatures, digital signatures only, digital signatures and associated description, etc.). Verifying authority  100  may then distribute the appropriate information to a value chain using the appropriate distribution techniques ( FIG. 14 , block  520 ).