New 'USG' Firewalls Protect USB Drives From Malicious Attacks (zdnet.com)
A developer has created the USG, "a small, portable hardware USB firewall...to prevent malicious USB sticks and devices laden with malware from infecting your computer." An anonymous reader quotes ZDNet:
The problem is that most computers automatically trust every USB device that's plugged in, which means malicious code can run without warning... Cars, cash registers, and some ATMs also come with USB ports, all of which can be vulnerable to cyberattacks from a single USB stick. That's where the USG firewall comes in...a simple hardware serial link that only accepts a very few select number of safe commands, which prevents the device from executing system commands or intercepting network traffic. That means the data can flow from the USB device, but [it] effectively blocks other USB exploits.
The firmware has been open sourced, and the technical specifications have also been released online "to allow anyone to build their own from readily available development boards."
The firmware has been open sourced, and the technical specifications have also been released online "to allow anyone to build their own from readily available development boards."
Sadly it's only USB1, so basically useless for moving files, which I imagine is the designed purpose. A cool device certainly, but at USB1 speeds more of a cool research project than something actually useful
Normal people worry me!
I have Huawei USB cellular modem that identifies itself simultaneously as:
1. USB mass storage, if one has a microSD card in the internal slot. This is handy for storing files and whatnot on the stick.
2. As a CD-ROM drive with a virtual CD containing the drivers needed for the cellular modem functionality, so the user can install the drivers needed while only possessing the stick itself (e.g. no real CD, no internet download, etc.).
3. As a cellular modem.