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posted by Dopefish on Monday February 24 2014, @03:00AM   Printer-friendly
from the flash-alternate-router-firmware-for-protection dept.

janrinok writes "A recent survey carried out by Tripwire, reported by the BBC, claims that "80% of the 25 best-selling routers available on Amazon are vulnerable to compromise". Security researcher Craig Young from Tripwire said exploits had been publicly discussed and published for more than one-third of these devices.

In a separate report, the Internet Storm Center (ISC) warned about a continuing attempt to exploit a vulnerability in 23 separate models of Linksys routers. A worm, called 'The Moon' is compromising Linksys routers and then scans for other potentially vulnerable systems. So far, wrote ISC researcher Johannes Ullrich in his blogpost, it is not clear why the routers are being compromised and what might be done with them. There are hints in the exploit code that the routers will at some point be gathered together into a network of compromised machines. Currently, he added, all the worm was doing was spreading to other Linksys routers.

The reason for the current European concern is a recent large scale attack on home routers in order to gather usernames and passwords for online bank accounts, reported by the Polish Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT) and elsewhere."

 
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  • (Score: 1) by TheLink on Monday February 24 2014, @07:04AM

    by TheLink (332) on Monday February 24 2014, @07:04AM (#5629) Journal

    The internal interface also matters.

    Which is why I wrote a second paragraph.

  • (Score: 1) by nsa on Monday February 24 2014, @09:25AM

    by nsa (206) on Monday February 24 2014, @09:25AM (#5696)

    Yes, I too quickly inferred from the word 'drive by' that you were referring to a wifi attack from a vehicle driving by. That said, even if the user is not logged in, the threat surface is still extremely large compared to an external interface filtering out admin access. Your 'should' in that paragraph is also one of those infamous 'should's to dwell on. Beside that, advanced persistent threats[1] in firmware can wait a long time for the user to log into the router.

    [1] Jonathan Corbet - Practical Security for 2014
    "Many of these problems can be explained by the fact that we're dealing with firmware authors, but there is more to it than that: a system's firmware has not traditionally been part of its security model. Suddenly the firmware has been put into an important position of trust, despite the fact that it was not written with that kind of security in mind."

    Again, we at the NSA are sorry for being too hasty delivering a retaliatory salvo to your opinion instead of considering it more carefully. Sorry about that.

    The NSA Never Says Anything.
    The NSA Always Apologizes For Its Mistakes
    The NSA Never Lies [washingtonpost.com]