Eduard Marin and Dave Singelée, researchers with KU Leuven University, Belgium, began examining the pacemakers under black box testing conditions in which they had no prior knowledge or special access to the devices, and used commercial off-the-shelf equipment to break the proprietary communications protocols.
From the position of blind attackers the pair managed to hack pacemakers from up to five metres away gaining the ability to deliver fatal shocks and turn off life-saving treatment.
The wireless attacks could also breach patient privacy, reading device information disclosing location history, treatments, and current state of health.
[...] "Using this black-box approach we just listened to the wireless communication channel and reverse-engineered the proprietary communication protocol. And once we knew all the zeros and ones in the message and their meaning, we could impersonate genuine readers and perform replay attacks etcetera."
(Score: 1) by anubi on Sunday December 04 2016, @06:15AM
Seems like something like an induction-coil coupler would be appropriate, so one would have to have the communication coil right over the skin under which the other coil resides.
If one has intent to do another in, its probably gonna happen anyway... whether it be done by clever technical means, chemical means, or physical means.
"Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]