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posted by cmn32480 on Monday May 18 2015, @05:23PM   Printer-friendly
from the back-to-horse-and-buggy-we-go dept.

El Reg reports:

The FBI has accused a security researcher of hacking into the entertainment system of a United Airlines plane mid-flight, before causing the aircraft to temporarily fly "sideways".

Infosec bod Chris Roberts allegedly made that audacious claim to Feds' special agent Mark Hurley, who subsequently applied for a search warrant to examine Roberts' seized electronic devices.

Thirteen items, including thumb drives, a MacBook Pro laptop and an iPad Air were confiscated from Roberts on 15 April this year, after the researcher exited a United Airline flight in Syracuse, New York, according to the Feds' affidavit (PDF).

Roberts, who founded One World Labs, has been quizzed twice by the FBI over the course of the past few months.

He apparently told the Feds that he had hacked into the inflight entertainment systems of Airbus and Boeing aircraft roughly 15 to 20 times between 2011 and 2014.

A story from the BBC has a different perspective on the situation:

Prof Alan Woodward from Surrey University told the BBC he found it "difficult to believe" a passenger could access and manipulate flight control systems from a plug socket on an aircraft seat.

"Flight systems are typically kept physically separate, as are any safety critical systems," he said.

"I can imagine only that someone has misunderstood something in the conversation between the researcher and the FBI, someone is exaggerating to make a point, or, it is actually possible and the aircraft manufacturers have some urgent work to do."/blockquote

The researcher in question, Chris Roberts said on twitter, "There's a whole five years of stuff that the affidavit incorrectly compressed into 1 paragraph... lots to untangle".

 
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  • (Score: 2) by mendax on Tuesday May 19 2015, @12:01AM

    by mendax (2840) on Tuesday May 19 2015, @12:01AM (#184883)

    This kind of thing makes me want to fly on a Boeing 707. When that plane was designed, most computers were room-filling and used vacuum tubes, although the Air Force had a small tube computer which was used on the B-58's navigation computer. (It was that computer which inspired the creation of the CORDIC algorithm for computing trig functions later used in hand calculators.) So it requires four people to fly it over an ocean and sucks fuel like it's cheap as water. At least it's not hackable from the passenger cabin.

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