Hack Causes Pacemakers To Deliver Life-Threatening Shocks (arstechnica.com) 72
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Life-saving pacemakers manufactured by Medtronic don't rely on encryption to safeguard firmware updates, a failing that makes it possible for hackers to remotely install malicious wares that threaten patients' lives, security researchers said Thursday. At the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas, researchers Billy Rios and Jonathan Butts said they first alerted medical device maker Medtronic to the hacking vulnerabilities in January 2017. So far, they said, the proof-of-concept attacks they developed still work. The duo on Thursday demonstrated one hack that compromised a CareLink 2090 programmer, a device doctors use to control pacemakers after they're implanted in patients. Because updates for the programmer aren't delivered over an encrypted HTTPS connection and firmware isn't digitally signed, the researchers were able to force it to run malicious firmware that would be hard for most doctors to detect. From there, the researchers said, the compromised machine could cause implanted pacemakers to make life-threatening changes in therapies, such as increasing the number of shocks delivered to patients. Rios and Butts were also able to use a $200 HackRF software-defined radio to hack a Medtronic-made insulin pump and make it withhold a scheduled dose of insulin. Medtronic has released a page that lists all the security advisories they have issued on the pacemakers and insulin pumps.
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Sure, so true, because after all the manufacturers will take this article (and the fine /. writeup), post it on the bulletin board, and the product teams will study this and make the minimum changes to address those, and only those, deficiencies.
Sadly, people think less of manufacturers every day. I would expect that they will also consider signing their data, oh, damn, you missed that.
Feh.
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The vendors already default to lowest-cost solutions which is why HTTP is what is currently used; HTTPS isn't ideal but it would be a significant improvement (except of course the certs will get left out on a web server to be stolen, because security?).
Beyond security, there are issues about proper testing (did you know that pace makers are only tested on 50+ males; what happens when you put one in a 20yo pregnant woman?) and (the lack of proper) government oversight.
See Karen Sandler (https://twitter.com/o
who goes to jail (Score:2)
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And the hackers go to jail now, right?
or the designer who left that feature (as in authentication) out?
You apparently haven't been following the news lately. White hats go to jail for disclosing blatant security holes but the designers are fine.
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Jesus it shouldnt need firmware updates (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not a gizmo no one cares about, all the products in the 80/90s had plenty of testing before shipping with just one firmware that wasn't updateable. These updates make manufacturers lazy and sometimes they push out something worse than the one that preceded it.
No updates, much less need for security. I don't want stuff in me to use the internet in any fashion.
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...I don't know about you but if I had a pacemaker i'd want it updated...by the way it's rf not the internet...
Considering the mess with my last Win10 update, I don't think I would.
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I believe it's an Azus.
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Oops, ignore previous. The pc with the problem is an HP.
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Yet we have lots of pacemakers who can't be updated which work just fine. Weird.
Stop excusing incompetence.
You need the update, dumbass, to your logic (Score:1)
People with pacemakers die of problems every day, you're oblivious lol. "Faulty pacemakers 'killing 2,000 a year': Third of unexpected deaths among patients thought to be caused by malfunctions" :
Scientists say there is evidence implants could be 'cause of mortality'
Research found 30 per cent of cases of sudden death were caused by mechanical flaws in the battery-powered devices
PUBLISHED: 19:29 EDT, 9 August 2015 | UPDATED: 13:08 EDT, 30 October 2015
A third of unexpected deaths among heart patients with
Re: You need the update, dumbass, to your logic (Score:1)
How does a firmware update fix a mechanical flaw, IDIOT
you ass baboon millennial
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A lot of them shouldn't even need firmware. When you go to a hospital, you may get a choice between a traditional drip, dosage measured via drip rate, and the computerised equivalent, with 85 levels of menus, some with hundreds of entries, a 640 x 480 display filled with the programmers showing off how much crap they can cram into a 640 x 480 display, dozens of options and parameters to get wrong, beeps and bongs all night long, graphics and animations and a hidden flight simulator and a Tetris game as an
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It's not the pacemaker that's the issue, it's the programming device when it got updated firmware that was insecure.
So, no HTTP access to your ticker or hacking the neighbor's pacemaker over his WiFi...
the film Dead in a Heartbeat (Score:2)
the film Dead in a Heartbeat
No remote access (Score:1)
In addition to using signed binaries, run a pair of wires to just beneath my skin.
If it ever needs reprogramming, make a small incision and wire me up for the upgrade.
Save the wireless things for less-consequencial things like reading the device's status. Even then, figure our some way to prevent an adversary from reading it unless he is rught up next to me for an extended period of time.
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make a small incision and wire me up for the upgrade.
Wire you up to what? A programmer that has been compromised?
Your TV set has better end-to-end security to ensure unauthorized Mickey Mouse movies aren't being viewed on unapproved hardware.
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....does not go to the BlackHat Conference, they should be fine!
It's not the patient's pacemaker that's at risk but the device the doctor uses to program the pacemaker.
So, you don't want your doctor to take his Medtronic pacemaker programming device to the BlackHat conference and turn it on to load firmware updates using whatever WiFi access point he happens to find. So, I'm not very worried... Zapp.. What was that? Zapp....
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RTFA
A complicated way of committing murder (Score:4, Informative)
Sure, you can hack a pacemaker and kill its wearer. You can also shoot him with a gun, poison him, bomb him, whatever. It is made even easier by the fact that people who wear pacemakers aren't usually at the peak of their shape.
But like they say in obligatory xkcd [xkcd.com], most people aren't murderers.
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You are right.
Somebody is going to hack into the programming device in some doctor's office. Wait for the device to get turned on to update it's firmware, perform a man in the middle attack to load the firmware of the hacker's choice, which is designed to change the parameters of a specific pacemaker device in ways which will kill the patient, not right away, but later, say when the target is asleep.
I'm thinking that if death of a target is your goal, there might be easier ways..
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You are right that this is useless if simple death of a target is your goal.
OTOH, if you want to commit murder in a way that is hard to trace back to you, short of having a Death Note, this might be the next "best" thing.
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But like they say in obligatory xkcd [xkcd.com], most people aren't murderers.
Most people aren’t swatters, either - but unfortunately a few think it’s funny. And those sorts of people seemed to be wired not to blame themselves when their “prank” goes very wrong [kansas.com].
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Here's why this line of reasoning fails:
All it takes is one individual who will threaten to kill pacemaker users unless they get ONE MILLION DOLLARS *raises pinky to mouth*
Is the threat real? Who knows? Probably just some guy in Romania making idle threats. Can a major company risk it?
What happens if the scammer realizes that people with pacemakers tend to die anyways, and publicizes a threat to kill one random person with
Sometimes direct murder is politically problematic (Score:2)
Wonder if Dick Cheney uses a MedTronic? (Score:2)
As the main cheerleader for US waterboarding, I've wondered how a motivated individual might subject him (Cheney) to a similarly terrifying and helplessness inducing experience.
Tweaking his pacemaker up & down through it's full range of speeds...with occasional stops & restarts might just do the trick! Just imagine how exciting it would be to discover your heart racing at 180 BPM for no apparent reason...then dropping off to an almost unconsious 20 BPM...now back up to 180 for a bit... Perhaps alm
Meditronic? Not their first vulnerability! (Score:1)
New ransomware (Score:2)
Dick Cheney (Score:2)
The VP was right with his concerns when he got one. Damn.