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posted by chromas on Tuesday August 27 2019, @11:41PM   Printer-friendly
from the soft-targets-are-more-huggable dept.

Data Shows IOT Security is Moving Backward

The security of IoT devices has been a running joke for many years, so much so that some researchers have given up trying to point out the weaknesses and get vendors to address the problems. Some vendors have pledged to do better and improve their development practices, but a year-long analysis of the security features in the firmware of 22 IoT device manufacturers found that not only are the vendors not making progress on security, they're actually going backward.

[...] The team wanted to see how IoT vendors were faring in adding standard hardening features to their firmware binaries, so it developed a special methodology that began with downloading available firmware updates from vendor websites, extracting Linux filesystems from the firmware, and then running each binary through the CITL's custom analytic tools. The dataset comprises more than 3.3 million individual binaries from nearly 5,000 firmware updates from 22 vendors, including ASUS, D-Link, Belkin, QNAP, and Mikrotik, and goes back as far as 2003.

What the team found is dispiriting, if not surprising: IoT firmware hardening is getting worse rather than better. Firmware updates are more likely to remove binary hardening features than to add them, and overall there hasn't been any trend in a positive direction for security in the 15 years covered by the CITL dataset.

[...] The CITL study looked for the presence of a number of possible hardening techniques, such as ASLR, non-executable stacks, and stack guards. These technologies are used to mitigate the effects of certain vulnerabilities and have been in wide use in the desktop and server worlds for many years. They have begun to make their way into IoT device firmware in the last few years, but the CITL data shows that updates often remove one or more of the hardening flags and some updates significantly reduce the overall security of the firmware. For example, one update shipped in 2017 by Ubiquiti for its UAP-HD line of wireless access points removed ASLR altogether and the presence of stack guards went from about 70 percent of binaries to virtually none.

[...] Although IoT devices often are associated with consumer applications, a tremendous amount of IoT gear finds its way into enterprise environments, as well, whether it's through official purchases or shadow installations by employees. Many of the firmware images the CITL study looked at are from networking devices, which are vital to enterprises and therefore quite valuable for attackers.

"We found major regressions in access points you would ship to enterprises by the crate. When you take these things in aggregate, that's a very soft target. It's a very low cost to find an exploit in those," Thompson said.


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  • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 28 2019, @01:48AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 28 2019, @01:48AM (#886582)

    PS - I don't advocate for shunning, but make note of barbarahudson's patterns. She cares about being inciting than insight, and - well, I refer you to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On_Bullshit [wikipedia.org] and leave it to the community to mod her up when she deserves it, but hopefully only when she deserves it, not to default associate her brand with being a good actor.

    Her post above exhibits the pattern: "voice a locally popular, but globally unpopular opinion in a way that will make people nod their heads." Where local generally is SN or /. populace, but can be narrower or wider. Watch for that pattern!

    "Let's declaim our common values!" should get a +agree mod that doesn't bump total mod, but lets points be used and lets the receiver garner the social credit. We can't be rid of the social credit collectors, but we can have a system that allows them to participate without increasing the noise level so much.

    Starting Score:    0  points
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    Extra 'Informative' Modifier   0  

    Total Score:   1