BadUSB

Boyd

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Jul 31, 2004
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Ben's Branch, Stephen Creek
Here's something new to worry about…..

http://www.wired.com/2014/07/usb-security/

BadUSB can be installed on a USB device to completely take over a PC, invisibly alter files installed from the memory stick, or even redirect the user’s internet traffic. Because BadUSB resides not in the flash memory storage of USB devices, but in the firmware that controls their basic functions, the attack code can remain hidden long after the contents of the device’s memory would appear to the average user to be deleted. And the two researchers say there’s no easy fix: The kind of compromise they’re demonstrating is nearly impossible to counter without banning the sharing of USB devices or filling your port with superglue.

“These problems can’t be patched,” says Nohl, who will join Lell in presenting the research at the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas. “We’re exploiting the very way that USB is designed.”
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The problem isn’t limited to thumb drives. All manner of USB devices from keyboards and mice to smartphones have firmware that can be reprogrammed—in addition to USB memory sticks, Nohl and Lell say they’ve also tested their attack on an Android handset plugged into a PC. And once a BadUSB-infected device is connected to a computer, Nohl and Lell describe a grab bag of evil tricks it can play. It can, for example, replace software being installed with with a corrupted or backdoored version. It can even impersonate a USB keyboard to suddenly start typing commands. “It can do whatever you can do with a keyboard, which is basically everything a computer does,” says Nohl.

The malware can silently hijack internet traffic too, changing a computer’s DNS settings to siphon traffic to any servers it pleases. Or if the code is planted on a phone or another device with an internet connection, it can act as a man-in-the-middle, secretly spying on communications as it relays them from the victim’s machine.
 

Boyd

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Seriously, a larger concern would be that a foreign government is building this (and other "backdoors") into their products. How many keyboards, mice, flash drives, cameras, phones, etc. are made in China?...
 
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46er

Piney
Mar 24, 2004
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Coastal NJ
Seriously, a larger concern would be that a foreign government is building this (and other "backdoors") into their products. How many keyboards, mice, flash drives, cameras, phones, etc. are made in China?...

And the list goes on. There are more USB ports in our truck than I have on my computer and they are used to upload updates to many of the trucks systems. :rolleyes:
 

dogg57

Piney
Jan 22, 2007
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Southern NJ
southjerseyphotos.com
Another view
Most USB devices have a fundamental security weakness that can be exploited to infect computers with malware in a way that cannot easily be prevented or detected, security researchers found.
The problem is that the majority of USB thumb drives, and likely other USB peripherals available on the market, do not protect their firmware—the software that runs on the microcontroller inside them, said Karsten Nohl, the founder and chief scientist of Berlin-based Security Research Labs.
This means that a malware program can replace the firmware on a USB device like a thumb drive by using secret SCSI (Small Computer System Interface) commands and make it act like some other type of device, for example, a keyboard, Nohl said.
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2460...eprogrammed-to-silently-infect-computers.html
 
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