New Windows Server security implementations to become mandatory next year

Windows Server

Starting January, some optional Windows Server products will require Trusted Platform Module (TPM) 2.0 and Secure Boot

Some optional Windows Server security implementations will become mandatory for Microsoft’s hardware partners to include in their products, starting in January, Microsoft indicated in a Thursday announcement.

After Jan. 1, 2021, new Windows Server products will be required to have the Trusted Platform Module (TPM) 2.0 installed, and they’ll also be required to have the Secure Boot security precaution turned on by default. In addition, the announcement implied that BitLocker encryption should be used on these servers as an additional protection against the actions of “rootkit” malware.

The announcement explained that x64 Windows Server products on the market today typically already include these capabilities, but they are considered to be options. In January, they’ll be mandatory requirements for all Windows Server hardware sold.

These requirements [coming in January] apply to servers where Windows Server will run, including bare metal, virtual machines (guests) running on Hyper-V or on third party hypervisors approved through the Server Virtualization Validation Program (SVVP), Microsoft’s announcement explained.

TPM 2.0 is a chip in machines that’s used for “securely performing measurements for attestation and storing keys.” It provides a reporting safeguard to assure that a system wasn’t hijacked by malware at the boot-up stage. BitLocker can leverage the TPM to keep data protected, the announcement explained: BitLocker is a native volume encryption solution for Windows Server and leverages the TPM2.0 to provide enhanced security. BitLocker leverages the TPM to ensure that volumes are only decrypted if the system booted as expected by the measurements captured in the TPM. Paired with Network Unlock, the TPM provides a scalable and secure management solution for BitLocker encryption ensuring that sensitive data is kept more secure.

At issue is the boot-up process of machines, where malware known as rootkits or “bootkits” could take action, going undetected by antivirus software. Secure Boot, a feature of Unified Extensible Firmware Interface-based machines, was a solution championed by Microsoft with the release of Windows 8 to protect against such malware.

While Microsoft will require Secure Boot for new Windows Server machines in January, it recently admitted that Secure Boot really isn’t up to the task of protecting firmware, at least at the PC level. That detail arose when Microsoft explained its Secured Core PCs approach back in October. Secured Core PCs use a combination of TPM 2.0 and Windows Defender System Guard technologies to provide protections at the boot level.

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