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Malware Infects 70% of Seagate Central NAS Drives, Earns $86,400 (softpedia.com)

An anonymous Slashdot reader writes: A new malware family has infected over 70% of all Seagate Central NAS devices connected to the Internet. The malware, named Miner-C or PhotoMiner, uses these hard-drives as an intermediary point to infect connected PCs and install software that mines for the Monero cryptocurrency... The crooks made over $86,000 from Monero mining so far.

The hard drives are easy to infect because Seagate does not allow users to delete or deactivate a certain "shared" folder when the device is exposed to the Internet. Over 5,000 Seagate Central NAS devices are currently infected.

Researchers estimates the malware is now responsible for 2.5% of all mining activity for the Monero cryptocurrency, according to the article. "The quandary is that Seagate Central owners have no way to protect their device. Turning off the remote access NAS feature can prevent the infection, but also means they lose the ability to access the device from a remote location, one of the reasons they purchased the hard drive in the first place."

7 of 98 comments (clear)

  1. BUILD your own NAS by stikves · · Score: 4, Informative

    It is not difficult to setup http://www.freenas.org/ on a small server machine, and benefit from FreeBSD security with no (known) backdoor accounts. If you're really serious get a proper NAS motherboard with ECC RAM (if you're not using ECC RAM, then it means you're not very serious with your data anyways), which won't cost you more than $500 with the case and the PSU.

    Of course if you're unable or unwilling to secure your box, accept that anything on the Internet is wide open, and buy (rent) online storage from Amazon, Box, or somewhere similar. Amazon gives free unlimited backup account with prime (which is around $99)

    1. Re:BUILD your own NAS by jtmach · · Score: 4, Informative

      Amazon gives free unlimited backup account with prime (which is around $99)

      I checked on this because I it sounded too good. Here's what I found.

      Your Amazon Prime membership comes with Amazon Prime Photos, unlimited photo storage and 5 GB for videos, music, and other files.

      Unlimited backup of any files is $60 a year.

  2. Re:Really? by damn_registrars · · Score: 5, Informative

    Once again, exposing various things directly to the Internet is a Bad Thing.

    Indeed it is, but it likely isn't really exposed "directly to the Internet". More likely it runs some service through a Seagate server that makes it available (likely by default, no less). After all, this is designed for home users and how many home users even would know how to modify their router's default rules to expose a specific port on a specific system to the internet?

    claiming device owners "have no way to protect their device" is bullshit.

    Well, if the first thing it does out of the box is call home to Seagate to give owners remote access to their files through the magical Seagate cloud, then the statement might be pretty darned accurate. These drives most likely default to getting addresses by DHCP on the user's network, and the user most likely gets their outside address by DHCP from their ISP. These hackers likely aren't finding these drives to be exposed directly, but rather to be exposed via Seagate. And considering the (lack of) quality that is Seagate these days, the drives probably have some terrible default password as well that makes it trivially easy for a hacker to get in.

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    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  3. Re: Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This.

    I have one of these devices. The first thing that must be done is to create an account on thw Seagate server. All account creation and password changes go through their server.

    The devicw itself is utter crap. Linux OS with an NTFS formatted. The transfer speed using ethernet is comparable to dialup.

    Stay away from anything Seagate / NAS. Waste of money.

  4. Re: That's not even the worst part by hairyfeet · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Well the rumor that was going around on the builders forums at the time (they even had lists of serials to tell the difference between "Seagate" drives and "Maxgate" drives) is that when Seagate bought Maxtor they got a REALLY cheap ARM HDD controller from Maxtor...how cheap? So cheap they could build 4 of them for the price of a single Seagate controller. Now what company wouldn't want to drop the price on a major part by 75%?

    The catch was this controller is buggy as fuck, especially if it gets hot. If you keep the drive super cool? It works fine, if the drive gets hot? It loses its little mind and forgets the HDD geometry and will slam the head because it doesn't know where the drive starts and ends. My own tests seem to back this up as I've had zero issues with Maxgate drives I put in a big old ATX case I have at the shop with a couple of 240mm fans front and back to push away any heat generated but if I put a Maxgate into a small PC box without a ton of fans? Its gonna fail, and the hotter the case the quicker the fail.

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    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  5. Re:Funny how Slashdot users are okay with criminal by mlts · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The criminals are virtually untouchable:

    1: They are likely in countries of the world that have zero interest in turning them over for justice. In fact, they may be regarded as folk heroes or equivalents of Robin Hood, taking money from corporations or countries and bringing it to the region.

    2: They are likely using employees to do the dirty work, with plenty of anonymity between them and the higher ups.

    3: Malware can be traced, and a lot of people suggest origin, but code can be edited and spread anywhere in the world, so code that originally came from Latveria can be used and abused by people from Lower Elbonia, and if distribution is done, the whitehats may never know the real origin.

    4: Compromising an endpoint isn't too difficult these days. If someone hacks a wi-fi router and compromises a home computer, all it takes is deleting the offending stuff securely, and that becomes a dead end.

    5: For every one criminal, there are others behind them.

    6: LEOs have many cases on their hands. It might be doubtful they may have the resources to handle anything but the big names, so chasing after every bad guy would be about as fruitful as chasing every pot smoker in the US.

    Going after criminals is nice, but that is a game of whack-a-mole. Unfortunately, computer security is a defensive war, but there are useful tools on the whitehat end which can help mitigate attacks.

    Long term, it may not be something is wanted in any shape or form, but I think what may end up happening is that countries themselves will demand control of the routers that go from one nation to another and enforce rules there. China has that, Iran is building it, and other countries are looking into blocking at their virtual borders, just like physical borders. It might be a token thing now, but as time goes on and money is put into it, it may become something all countries have in place, just so another country that has IP ranges that are hotspots for attack are blocked there, so every single Internet entity in the nation wouldn't have to deal with them.

  6. Re: Silly Suits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    There's a culture of insecurity at Seagate's NAS unit.

    Some years ago, we (not a security or IT firm) reported some issues with their web interface. Basically there was a public (no authentication needed) PHP script in the directory used to serve the web admin interface which ran arbitrary commands from the URI as wheel. That could be used to reset the admin password, load and run arbitrary code, load an entire hostile OS for the NAS, etc.

    Support didn't understand the issue, and security ignored it as being too difficult to exploit in practice. We soon pointed out to Seagate and some friendly media that there were hundreds of these exploitable Seagate NAS boxes indexed on Google, including Organizations working in charitable and vulnerable sectors, and that we would be contacting Seagate's customers about the issue.

    They still didn't admit that there was an issue, but their next 'firmware' update addresses the issue by requiring a password to run arbitraty commands from the URI. The passwors was the same for all devices and was stored in a plaintext file in the same publicly accessible directory.

    We stopped using Seagate products altogether after that experience.