Tech Advisor

Making IoT more secure

Device vendors need to make a lot of changes, an advisory group said. Stephen Lawson reports

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Sometimes the truth hurts but you just have to face it. The internet advisory group BITAG lays it on the line for the IoT industry in a new report.

“It’s safe to assume that most end users will never take action on their own to update software,” the Broadband Internet Technology Advisory Group said. Its recommenda­tion: build in mechanisms for automatic, secure updates.

That bit of human nature is just one of the harsh realities BITAG acknowledg­es in the report. It also points out that some consumer IoT devices ship with weak built-in usernames and passwords such as ‘admin’ and ‘password’, can’t do authentica­tion or encryption, or can easily be taken over by malware that turns them into bots.

The latter fact became obvious earlier this year when Mirai botnets wreaked havoc with the internet due to vulnerable security cameras and other devices. But BITAG was on the case months before that, launching the research for the report in June.

BITAG has several pieces of advice for vendors of home IoT software and hardware. Given that the organisati­on includes representa­tives from companies such as Cisco Systems, Google, AT&T and Comcast, those tips might find their way into future products and services. The most basic one is that IoT vendors should assume that, eventually, whatever they build will have bugs and vulnerabil­ities. That’s why they need automatic over-theair update tools that don’t force users to do anything – even to opt in, BITAG said.

The report called on device makers to follow a list of best practices for security, including authentica­ting all communicat­ions, encrypting data stored on the device, and providing a way to revoke certificat­es when they’ve been compromise­d.

By default, IoT devices shouldn’t be reachable through inbound network connection­s, even from devices in the same house, because those might have been compromise­d, BITAG said.

The report also recommende­d IoT devices use IPv6, the latest version of Internet Protocol. It allows for end-to-end connection­s between devices over the internet and has some security features that the older IPv4 doesn’t. Other experts have said IPv6 will be necessary just to supply unique IP addresses for all the billions of anticipate­d IoT devices. However, implementi­ng the new protocol in networks can be a difficult process that’s not without hazards.

Other BITAG recommenda­tions don’t address security directly but touch on headaches some consumers have had with home IoT. The report calls on manufactur­ers to make devices that can work offline, since errors and certain kinds of attacks can kick a home off the internet. They should also be able to work if the accompanyi­ng cloud service fails.

Also, the group called on vendors to tell consumers how long they’ll support the products they’re selling, including whether they may disable features in the future. Nest’s deactivati­on of Revolv smart-home hubs earlier this year caused a stir among some US consumers who had paid $299 for the devices before Nest acquired Revolv.

Will there be a way to quickly tell whether a home IoT device is secure? Maybe. BITAG suggested the industry create a logo or notation for products that comply with a set of best practices, to save consumers from having to pore over specs to find out what each device has. But it didn’t create the program itself.

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