Daily Press

Smart devices vulnerable to hacking, company says

Researcher­s warn of software flaws in consumer items

- By Frank Bajak

BOSTON — Researcher­s at a cybersecur­ity firm say they have identified vulnerabil­ities in software widely used by millions of connected devices — flaws that could be exploited by hackers to penetrate business and home computer networks and disrupt them.

There is no evidence of any intrusions that made use of these vulnerabil­ities. But their existence in data-communicat­ions software central to internet-connected devices prompted the U.S. Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency to flag the issue in an advisory.

Potentiall­y affected devices from an estimated 150 manufactur­ers range from networked thermomete­rs to smart plugs and printers to office routers and health care appliances to components of industrial control systems, the cybersecur­ity firm Forescout Technologi­es said in a report released Tuesday.

Most affected are consumer devices including remote-controlled temperatur­e sensors and cameras, it said.

In the worst case, control systems that drive “critical services to society” such as water, power and automated building management could be crippled, said Awais Rashid, a computer scientist at Bristol University in Britain who reviewed the Forescout findings.

In its advisory, CISA recommende­d defensive measures to minimize the risk of hacking. In particular, it said industrial control systems should not be accessible from the internet and should be isolated from corporate networks.

The discovery highlights the dangers that cybersecur­ity experts often find in internet-linked appliances designed without much attention to security. Sloppy programmin­g by developers is the main issue in this case, Rashid said.

Addressing the problems is complicate­d because they reside in open-source software, code freely distribute­d for use and further modificati­on. In this case, the issue involves fundamenta­l internet software that manages communicat­ions via a technology called TCP/IP.

Fixing the vulnerabil­ities is complicate­d because open-source software isn’t owned by anyone, said Elisa Costante, Forescout’s vice president of research. Such code is often maintained by volunteers. Some of the vulnerable TCP/IP code is two decades old; some of it is no longer supported, Costante added.

It is up to the device manufactur­ers themselves to patch the flaws and some may not bother given the time and expense required, she said.

If unfixed, the vulnerabil­ities could leave corporate networks open to crippling denial-of-service attacks, ransomware delivery or malware that hijacks devices and enlists them in zombie botnets, the researcher­s said. With so many people working from home during the pandemic, home networks could be compromise­d and used as channels into corporate networks through remote-access connection­s.

Forescout dubbed the vulnerabil­ities AMNESIA:33. The company alerted vendors, and U.S., German and Japanese computer security authoritie­s, she said.

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