The real cost of Made in China
Posted: Wed Jan 30, 2013 4:00 pm
More Than A Dozen Brands Of Security Camera Systems Vulnerable To Hacker Hijacking
Eighteen brands of security camera digital video recorders (DVRs) are vulnerable to an attack that would allow a hacker to remotely gain control of the devices to watch, copy, delete or alter video streams at will, as well as to use the machines as jumping-off points to access other computers behind a company’s firewall, according to tests by two security researchers. And one of the researchers, security firm Rapid7′s chief security officer H.D. Moore, has discovered that 58,000 of the hackable video boxes, all of which use firmware provided by the Guangdong, China-based firm Ray Sharp, are accessible via the Internet.
“The DVR gives you access to all their video, current and archived,” says Moore. “You could look at videos, pause and play, or just turn off the cameras and rob the store.”
Not boneheaded. Clever.“It’s just a boneheaded decision on the part of [Ray Sharp],” says Moore. “Fifty-eight thousand homes and businesses are exposed because of the way these things cut holes in the firewall.”
I hope EMC2 doesn't have one of these.By checking the web interfaces of the vulnerable devices and analyzing the Ray Sharp firmware he downloaded from Swann’s website, Moore was able to identify 18 companies that seem to use the faulty code: Swann, Lorex, URMET, KGuard, Defender, DSP Cop, SVAT, Zmodo, BCS, Bolide, EyeForce, Atlantis, Protectron, Greatek, Soyo, Hi-View, Cosmos, and J2000.