By Joris Evers, CNET News.com
Monday, August 14 2006 10:16 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/techguide/wireless/0,39044905,39389977,00.htm
Flaws in the software that runs wireless-networking hardware
could let an attacker break into a PC over Wi-Fi, security researchers have warned.
An attacker could gain complete control over a laptop by sending malformed
network traffic to a vulnerable computer, David Maynor, a senior researcher at
security service provider SecureWorks, said in a presentation at the Black Hat
security event in Las Vegas.
Maynor, along with researcher Jon "Johnny Cache" Ellch, showed a video of a
successful attack on a MacBook,
made by Apple Computer. However, the attack is possible also on other
computers, both laptops and desktops, and not just MacBooks, the researchers
said.
"These driver flaws are pretty common," Maynor said. Researchers are starting
to find those bugs as they shift their focus from hunting for operating system
flaws to exploitable errors in drivers and in applications, he said. The reason
for the shift is that operating systems are becoming increasingly more secure,
he added.
There is no immediate threat to the millions of laptop-toting wireless users.
Maynor and Ellch are not releasing the details of their attack, and they
deliberately did not show a live demonstration to prevent anyone from copying
their attack.
"People who should be worrying about this are the hardware and software
makers, so this doesn't make it into the mainstream," Maynor said.
Consumers should be streetwise when using their laptop by not
connecting to networks they are not sure they can trust and by disabling the
wireless radio when it is not needed, Maynor said. "There is no need to run out
and rip your wireless card out of your laptop, but you should take precautions,"
he said.
With their Black Hat talk, Maynor and Cache hope to wake up makers of buggy
drivers. "We want to educate developers and hardware makers about this threat
before it becomes a wide-scale issue," Maynor said. "We're not talking about
something that people don't know about, but a lot of people don't know the
severity."
Driver flaws have been getting more attention recently. Microsoft, for
example, is readying tools
for driver developers to scan their code for common vulnerabilities.
According to a recent experiment by Intel flaws in driver software may be
worrisome and a potentially serious threat, but there is no
need for alarm yet.
To launch an attack using the Wi-Fi driver flaws, the would-be intruder needs
to be within about 100 feet, or 30 meters, of its target--the typical reach of a
Wi-Fi signal. However, new wireless technologies are extending this range
significantly and could increase the threat, so new bugs will likely be found,
Maynor said.
To facilitate an attack, the researchers found a way to remotely identify the
wireless driver that a particular computer is running, Maynor said. Then
malicious data traffic needs to be crafted and sent to the vulnerable PC. A flaw
in the way that computer processes the data subsequently causes the compromise,
he said.
Coincidentally, Intel late last week issued fixes
for flaws in software that controls its popular Centrino wireless hardware.
These patches are not related to the Black Hat research, Maynor said. The
researchers have worked with hardware and software makers on the issue of Wi-Fi
drivers, but not with Intel, he said.