Microsoft has built a USB thumb drive for the police that scans computer hard
drives.
The Computer Online Forensic Evidence Extractor can be used in police raids
to map hard drives and decrypt passwords without shutting the computer down and
losing evidence.
The device was shown off at a three-day security conference for 350 law
enforcement officials in Redmond, Washington.
"These are things in which we invest substantial resources, but not from the
perspective of making money," Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith told the
Seattle Times. "We're doing this to help ensure that the internet stays
safe."
The thumb drive has 150 commands and can log hard drive activity, check on
surfing history and decrypt some passwords.
Microsoft has distributed the device for free since last year, and claims
that it is in use by over 2,000 officers in 15 countries.
However, Smith acknowledged that there is a financial upside for Microsoft in
giving away the device, since it makes money selling ancillary software and
services.
Microsoft has been holding law enforcement meetings since 2006 in an effort
to educate police about cyber-crime.
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