Skip to main content
added 448 characters in body
Source Link
user139336
  • 506
  • 1
  • 4
  • 10

[1] : The Qubes OS team are working on making it possible to support other hypervisors (such as KVM) so that you can not only choose different systems to run on your VMs, but also the very hypervisor that runs these virtual machines.
[2] : You also additionaly need to configure an option so that the DisposableVM-that is generated once you click on “Open in DispVM”-will be offline, so that they can't get your IP address. To do that: "By default, if a DisposableVM is created (by Open in DispVM or Run in DispVM) from within a VM that is not connected to the Tor gateway, the new DisposableVM may route its traffic over clearnet. This is because DisposableVMs inherit their NetVMs from the calling VM (or the calling VM's dispvm_netvm setting if different). The dispvm_netvm setting can be configured per VM by: dom0 → Qubes VM Manager → VM Settings → Advanced → NetVM for DispVM." You'll need to set it to none so that it isn't connected to any network VM and wont have any Internet access.
[3] : Edit: This answer mentions Subgraph OS, hopefully when a Subgraph template VM is created for Qubes you could use it with Qubes, making thus exploits much harder, and thanks to the integrated sandbox it would require another sandbox escape exploit as well as a Xen exploit to compromise your entire machine.

[1] : The Qubes OS team are working on making it possible to support other hypervisors (such as KVM) so that you can not only choose different systems to run on your VMs, but also the very hypervisor that runs these virtual machines.
[2] : You also additionaly need to configure an option so that the DisposableVM-that is generated once you click on “Open in DispVM”-will be offline, so that they can't get your IP address. To do that: "By default, if a DisposableVM is created (by Open in DispVM or Run in DispVM) from within a VM that is not connected to the Tor gateway, the new DisposableVM may route its traffic over clearnet. This is because DisposableVMs inherit their NetVMs from the calling VM (or the calling VM's dispvm_netvm setting if different). The dispvm_netvm setting can be configured per VM by: dom0 → Qubes VM Manager → VM Settings → Advanced → NetVM for DispVM." You'll need to set it to none so that it isn't connected to any network VM and wont have any Internet access.

[1] : The Qubes OS team are working on making it possible to support other hypervisors (such as KVM) so that you can not only choose different systems to run on your VMs, but also the very hypervisor that runs these virtual machines.
[2] : You also additionaly need to configure an option so that the DisposableVM-that is generated once you click on “Open in DispVM”-will be offline, so that they can't get your IP address. To do that: "By default, if a DisposableVM is created (by Open in DispVM or Run in DispVM) from within a VM that is not connected to the Tor gateway, the new DisposableVM may route its traffic over clearnet. This is because DisposableVMs inherit their NetVMs from the calling VM (or the calling VM's dispvm_netvm setting if different). The dispvm_netvm setting can be configured per VM by: dom0 → Qubes VM Manager → VM Settings → Advanced → NetVM for DispVM." You'll need to set it to none so that it isn't connected to any network VM and wont have any Internet access.
[3] : Edit: This answer mentions Subgraph OS, hopefully when a Subgraph template VM is created for Qubes you could use it with Qubes, making thus exploits much harder, and thanks to the integrated sandbox it would require another sandbox escape exploit as well as a Xen exploit to compromise your entire machine.

added 1084 characters in body
Source Link
user139336
  • 506
  • 1
  • 4
  • 10

Qubes is an operating system where it's all based on virtual machines. You can think of it as if you had different isolated ‘computers’ inside yours. So that way you can compartmentalize your digital life into different domains, so that you can have a ‘computer’ where you only do work related stuff, another ‘computer’ that is offline and where you store your password database and your PGP keys, and another ‘computer’ that is specifically dedicated for untrusted browsing... The possibilities are countless, and the only limit is your RAM and basically how much different ‘computers’ can be loaded at once. To insure that all these ‘computers’ are properly isolated from each other, and that they can't break to your host (called ‘dom0’ for domain 0) and thereby control all of your machine, Qubes uses the Xen hypervisor,[1] which is the same piece of software that is relied upon by many major hosting providers to isolate websites and services from each other such as Amazon EC2, IBM, Linode... Another cool thing is that each one of your ‘computers’ has a special color that is reflected in the windows' borders. So you can choose red for the untrusted ‘computer’, and blue for your work ‘computer’ (see for example picture below). Thus in practice it becomes really easy to see which domain you're working at. So let's say now that some nasty malware gets into your untrusted virtual machine, then it can't break and infect other virtual machines that may contain sensitive information unless it has an exploit that can use a vulnerability in Xen to break into dom0 (which is very rare), something that significantly raises the bar of security (before one would only need to deploy malware to your machine before controlling everything), and it will protect you from most attackers except the most resourced and sophisticated ones.

The other answer mentioned that you can use a burner laptop. A Disposable Virtual Machine is kind of the same except that you're not bound by physical constraints: you have infinitely many disposable VMs at your wish. All it takes to create one is a click, and after you're done the virtual machine is destroyed. Pretty cool, huh? Qubes comes with a Thunderbird extension that lets you open file attachments in DisposableVMs, so that can be pretty useful for your needs.[2]

Let's say you found an interesting document, and let's say that you had an offline virtual machine specifically dedicated for storing and opening documents. Of course, you can directly send that document to that VM, but there could still be a chance that this document is malicious and may try for instance to delete all of your files (a behavior that you wouldn't notice in the short-lived DisposableVM). But you can also convert it into what's called a ‘Trusted PDF’. You send the file to a different VM, then you open the file manager, navigate to the directory of the file, right-click and choose “Convert to Trusted PDF”, and then send the file back to the VM where you collect your documents. But what does it exactly do? The “Convert to Trusted PDF” tool creates a new DisposableVM, puts the file there, and then transform it via a parser (that runs in the DisposableVM) that basically takes the RGB value of each pixel and leaves anything else. It's a bit like opening the PDF in an isolated environment and then ‘screenshoting it’ if you will. The file obviously gets much bigger, if I recall it transformed when I tested a 10Mb PDF into a 400Mb one. You can get much more details on that in this blogpost by security researcher and Qubes OS creator Joanna Rutkowska.


[1] : The Qubes OS team are working on making it possible to support other hypervisors (such as KVM) so that you can not only choose different systems to run on your VMs, but also the very hypervisor that runs these virtual machines.
[2] : You also additionaly need to configure an option so that the DisposableVM-that is generated once you click on “Open in DispVM”-will be offline, so that they can't get your IP address. To do that: "By default, if a DisposableVM is created (by Open in DispVM or Run in DispVM) from within a VM that is not connected to the Tor gateway, the new DisposableVM may route its traffic over clearnet. This is because DisposableVMs inherit their NetVMs from the calling VM (or the calling VM's dispvm_netvm setting if different). The dispvm_netvm setting can be configured per VM by: dom0 → Qubes VM Manager → VM Settings → Advanced → NetVM for DispVM." You'll need to set it to none so that it isn't connected to any network VM and wont have any Internet access.

Qubes is an operating system where it's all based on virtual machines. You can think of it as if you had different isolated ‘computers’ inside yours. So that way you can compartmentalize your digital life into different domains, so that you can have a ‘computer’ where you only do work related stuff, another ‘computer’ that is offline and where you store your password database and your PGP keys, and another ‘computer’ that is specifically dedicated for untrusted browsing... The possibilities are countless, and the only limit is your RAM and basically how much different ‘computers’ can be loaded at once. To insure that all these ‘computers’ are properly isolated from each other, and that they can't break to your host (called ‘dom0’ for domain 0) and thereby control all of your machine, Qubes uses the Xen hypervisor, which is the same piece of software that is relied upon by many major hosting providers to isolate websites and services from each other such as Amazon EC2, IBM, Linode... Another cool thing is that each one of your ‘computers’ has a special color that is reflected in the windows' borders. So you can choose red for the untrusted ‘computer’, and blue for your work ‘computer’ (see for example picture below). Thus in practice it becomes really easy to see which domain you're working at. So let's say now that some nasty malware gets into your untrusted virtual machine, then it can't break and infect other virtual machines that may contain sensitive information unless it has an exploit that can use a vulnerability in Xen to break into dom0 (which is very rare), something that significantly raises the bar of security (before one would only need to deploy malware to your machine before controlling everything), and it will protect you from most attackers except the most resourced and sophisticated ones.

The other answer mentioned that you can use a burner laptop. A Disposable Virtual Machine is kind of the same except that you're not bound by physical constraints: you have infinitely many disposable VMs at your wish. All it takes to create one is a click, and after you're done the virtual machine is destroyed. Pretty cool, huh? Qubes comes with a Thunderbird extension that lets you open file attachments in DisposableVMs, so that can be pretty useful for your needs.

Let's say you found an interesting document, and let's say that you had an offline virtual machine specifically dedicated for storing and opening documents. Of course, you can directly send that document to that VM, but there could still be a chance that this document is malicious and may try for instance to delete all of your files (a behavior that you wouldn't notice in the short-lived DisposableVM). But you can also convert it into what's called a ‘Trusted PDF’. You send the file to a different VM, then you open the file manager, navigate to the directory of the file, right-click and choose “Convert to Trusted PDF”, and then send the file back to the VM where you collect your documents. But what does it exactly do? The “Convert to Trusted PDF” tool creates a new DisposableVM, puts the file there, and then transform it via a parser (that runs in the DisposableVM) that basically takes the RGB value of each pixel and leaves anything else. It's a bit like opening the PDF in an isolated environment and then ‘screenshoting it’ if you will. The file obviously gets much bigger, if I recall it transformed when I tested a 10Mb PDF into a 400Mb one. You can get much more details on that in this blogpost by security researcher and Qubes OS creator Joanna Rutkowska.

Qubes is an operating system where it's all based on virtual machines. You can think of it as if you had different isolated ‘computers’ inside yours. So that way you can compartmentalize your digital life into different domains, so that you can have a ‘computer’ where you only do work related stuff, another ‘computer’ that is offline and where you store your password database and your PGP keys, and another ‘computer’ that is specifically dedicated for untrusted browsing... The possibilities are countless, and the only limit is your RAM and basically how much different ‘computers’ can be loaded at once. To insure that all these ‘computers’ are properly isolated from each other, and that they can't break to your host (called ‘dom0’ for domain 0) and thereby control all of your machine, Qubes uses the Xen hypervisor,[1] which is the same piece of software that is relied upon by many major hosting providers to isolate websites and services from each other such as Amazon EC2, IBM, Linode... Another cool thing is that each one of your ‘computers’ has a special color that is reflected in the windows' borders. So you can choose red for the untrusted ‘computer’, and blue for your work ‘computer’ (see for example picture below). Thus in practice it becomes really easy to see which domain you're working at. So let's say now that some nasty malware gets into your untrusted virtual machine, then it can't break and infect other virtual machines that may contain sensitive information unless it has an exploit that can use a vulnerability in Xen to break into dom0 (which is very rare), something that significantly raises the bar of security (before one would only need to deploy malware to your machine before controlling everything), and it will protect you from most attackers except the most resourced and sophisticated ones.

The other answer mentioned that you can use a burner laptop. A Disposable Virtual Machine is kind of the same except that you're not bound by physical constraints: you have infinitely many disposable VMs at your wish. All it takes to create one is a click, and after you're done the virtual machine is destroyed. Pretty cool, huh? Qubes comes with a Thunderbird extension that lets you open file attachments in DisposableVMs, so that can be pretty useful for your needs.[2]

Let's say you found an interesting document, and let's say that you had an offline virtual machine specifically dedicated for storing and opening documents. Of course, you can directly send that document to that VM, but there could still be a chance that this document is malicious and may try for instance to delete all of your files (a behavior that you wouldn't notice in the short-lived DisposableVM). But you can also convert it into what's called a ‘Trusted PDF’. You send the file to a different VM, then you open the file manager, navigate to the directory of the file, right-click and choose “Convert to Trusted PDF”, and then send the file back to the VM where you collect your documents. But what does it exactly do? The “Convert to Trusted PDF” tool creates a new DisposableVM, puts the file there, and then transform it via a parser (that runs in the DisposableVM) that basically takes the RGB value of each pixel and leaves anything else. It's a bit like opening the PDF in an isolated environment and then ‘screenshoting it’ if you will. The file obviously gets much bigger, if I recall it transformed when I tested a 10Mb PDF into a 400Mb one. You can get much more details on that in this blogpost by security researcher and Qubes OS creator Joanna Rutkowska.


[1] : The Qubes OS team are working on making it possible to support other hypervisors (such as KVM) so that you can not only choose different systems to run on your VMs, but also the very hypervisor that runs these virtual machines.
[2] : You also additionaly need to configure an option so that the DisposableVM-that is generated once you click on “Open in DispVM”-will be offline, so that they can't get your IP address. To do that: "By default, if a DisposableVM is created (by Open in DispVM or Run in DispVM) from within a VM that is not connected to the Tor gateway, the new DisposableVM may route its traffic over clearnet. This is because DisposableVMs inherit their NetVMs from the calling VM (or the calling VM's dispvm_netvm setting if different). The dispvm_netvm setting can be configured per VM by: dom0 → Qubes VM Manager → VM Settings → Advanced → NetVM for DispVM." You'll need to set it to none so that it isn't connected to any network VM and wont have any Internet access.

added 215 characters in body; Post Made Community Wiki
Source Link
user139336
  • 506
  • 1
  • 4
  • 10

Let's say you found an interesting document, and let's say that you had an offline virtual machine specifically dedicated for storing and opening documents. Of course, you can directly send that document to that VM, but there could still be a chance that this document is malicious and may try for instance to delete all of your files (a behavior that you wouldn't notice in the short-lived DisposableVM). But you can also convert it into what's called a ‘Trusted PDF’. You send the file to a different VM, then you open the file manager, navigate to the directory of the file, right-click and choose “Convert to Trusted PDF”, and then send the file back to the VM where you collect your documents.1


1: But what does it exactly do? The “Convert to Trusted PDF” tool creates a new DisposableVM, puts the file there, and then transform it via a parser (that runs in the DisposableVM) that basically takes the RGB value of each pixel and leaves anything else. It's a bit like opening the PDF in an isolated environment and then ‘screenshoting it’ if you will. The file obviously gets much bigger, if I recall it transformed when I tested a 10Mb PDF into a 400Mb one. You can get much more details on that in this blogpost by security researcher and Qubes OS creator Joanna Rutkowska.

Let's say you found an interesting document, and let's say that you had an offline virtual machine specifically dedicated for storing and opening documents. Of course, you can directly send that document to that VM, but there could still be a chance that this document is malicious and may try for instance to delete all of your files (a behavior that you wouldn't notice in the short-lived DisposableVM). But you can also convert it into what's called a ‘Trusted PDF’. You send the file to a different VM, then you open the file manager, navigate to the directory of the file, right-click and choose “Convert to Trusted PDF”, and then send the file back to the VM where you collect your documents.1


1: The “Convert to Trusted PDF” tool creates a new DisposableVM, puts the file there, and then transform it via a parser (that runs in the DisposableVM) that basically takes the RGB value of each pixel and leaves anything else. It's a bit like opening the PDF in an isolated environment and then ‘screenshoting it’ if you will. The file obviously gets much bigger, if I recall it transformed when I tested a 10Mb PDF into a 400Mb one.

Let's say you found an interesting document, and let's say that you had an offline virtual machine specifically dedicated for storing and opening documents. Of course, you can directly send that document to that VM, but there could still be a chance that this document is malicious and may try for instance to delete all of your files (a behavior that you wouldn't notice in the short-lived DisposableVM). But you can also convert it into what's called a ‘Trusted PDF’. You send the file to a different VM, then you open the file manager, navigate to the directory of the file, right-click and choose “Convert to Trusted PDF”, and then send the file back to the VM where you collect your documents. But what does it exactly do? The “Convert to Trusted PDF” tool creates a new DisposableVM, puts the file there, and then transform it via a parser (that runs in the DisposableVM) that basically takes the RGB value of each pixel and leaves anything else. It's a bit like opening the PDF in an isolated environment and then ‘screenshoting it’ if you will. The file obviously gets much bigger, if I recall it transformed when I tested a 10Mb PDF into a 400Mb one. You can get much more details on that in this blogpost by security researcher and Qubes OS creator Joanna Rutkowska.

Pulled comment detailing the "Convert to Trusted PDF" tool into body.
Source Link
Loading
added 325 characters in body
Source Link
user139336
  • 506
  • 1
  • 4
  • 10
Loading
added 37 characters in body
Source Link
user139336
  • 506
  • 1
  • 4
  • 10
Loading
added 65 characters in body
Source Link
user139336
  • 506
  • 1
  • 4
  • 10
Loading
Source Link
user139336
  • 506
  • 1
  • 4
  • 10
Loading