The Jerusalem Post

Hotel key cards, even invalid ones, help hackers break into rooms

- • By JUSSI ROSENDAHL and ATTILA CSER

HELSINKI (Reuters) – By getting hold of a widely used hotel key card, an attacker could create a master key to unlock any room in the building without leaving a trace, Finnish security researcher­s said in a study published on Wednesday, solving a 14-year-old mystery.

While the researcher­s have fixed the flaw together with Assa Abloy, the world’s largest lock manufactur­er, which owns the system in question, the case serves as a wake-up call for the lodging industry to a problem that went undetected for years.

Tomi Tuominen, 45, and Timo Hirvonen, 32, security consultant­s for Finnish data-security company F-Secure, say they discovered the vulnerabil­ity about a year ago and reported it to Assa.

“We found out that by using any key card to a hotel... you can create a master key that can enter any room in the hotel,” Hirvonen said in an interview. “It doesn’t even have to be a valid card. It can be an expired one.”

The researcher­s helped Assa fix the software for an update made available to hotel chains in February. Assa said some hotels have updated it but that it would take a couple more weeks to fully resolve the issue.

“I highly encourage the hotels to install those software fixes,” Hirvonen said. “But I think there is no immediate threat, since being able to develop this attack is going to take some time.”

Any fresh security risk remains low because the researcher­s’ tools and method will not be published, Assa noted.

The radio-frequency ID key-card system in question, Vision by Vingcard, has been replaced by many hotels with new technology. But its current owner, Assa Abloy, estimated that the system is still being used in several hundred thousand hotel rooms worldwide.

Tuominen said the breakthrou­gh was to figure out a weakness in how the locks are deployed and installed, together with a seemingly minor technical design flaw.

COLD CASE FILES

Sitting at F-Secure’s glassand-steel-on-stilts headquarte­rs by the Baltic Sea, the researcher­s show off a small hardware device that they have made able to write a master key out of the informatio­n of any card in the Vingcard system.

Clues date back to 2003 when a laptop disappeare­d from a computer-security expert’s room at a high-class hotel in Berlin.

The thief left no traces in the room or within the electric lock system, hotel personnel said. The stolen laptop, which never turned up, belonged to a guest who had presented his research at a security conference.

Hearing of the theft at the conference, Tuominen and Hirvonen – then youthful computer guys in hacker-style black hoodies – asked themselves: Could one hack the locking system without leaving a trace?

For years, the two worked off and on to solve the mystery of the plastic cards, which guests often neglect to return. First it was purely a hobby, later a profession­al mission.

“These issues alone are not a problem, but once you combine those two things, it becomes exploitabl­e,” Hirvonen said. “I wouldn’t be surprised if other electronic lock systems have similar vulnerabil­ities. You cannot really know how secure the system is unless someone has really tried to break it.”

The researcher­s say they have no evidence whether the vulnerabil­ities they found have been put to work by criminals.

Assa Abloy stressed that its newer offerings are based on different technologi­es, including a system that allows hotel guests to open door locks with their smartphone­s.

“The challenge of the security business is that it is a moving target,” Christophe Sut, an executive at Assa Abloy Hospitalit­y, said in a phone interview. “What is secure at a point of time is not 20 years later.”

The researcher­s asked for no money from Assa for their work or discovery, saying they were only driven by the challenge.

“Some people play football, some people go sailing, some do photograph­y. This is our hobby,” Tuominen

 ?? (Attila Cser/Reuters) ?? F-SECURE RESEARCHER Timo Hirvonen shows a device that is able to create a master key out of a single hotel key card in Helsinki last week.
(Attila Cser/Reuters) F-SECURE RESEARCHER Timo Hirvonen shows a device that is able to create a master key out of a single hotel key card in Helsinki last week.

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