Microsoft Builds USB Drive For Police

April 30, 2008 | by Christopher Nickson

The special USB drive can scan hard drives and even decrypt some passwords.

It looks like a typical USB thumb drive, but under the hood there’s a lot more going on. Microsoft has built these items specially for police forces, and inside that mild-mannered exterior, it contains a few super powers.
 
Called the Computer Online Forensic Evidence Extractor, it has over 150 commands, including the ability to check surfing history, decrypt some passwords, log hard drive activity and map hard drives – all without shutting down the computer and risk losing evidence.
 
The company began giving the device to police last year, and now it’s used by more than 2,000 forces across 15 different countries, but it was put on display for the first time when Microsoft hosted a conference for law-enforcement personnel at its Redmond campus.
 
Microsoft general counsel Brad Smith told the Seattle Times:
 
"These are things in which we invest substantial resources, but not from the perspective of making money. We're doing this to help ensure that the internet stays safe."
 
However, he admitted that the altruism does pay off in the other software and services they sell the forces to go with the USB stick.

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