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Hackers Can Turn Amazon Echo Into a Covert Listening Device (helpnetsecurity.com)

Orome1 shares a report from Help Net Security: New research released by MWR InfoSecurity reveals how attackers can compromise the Amazon Echo and turn it into a covert listening device, without affecting its overall functionality. Found to be susceptible to a physical attack, which allows an attacker to gain a root shell on the Linux Operating Systems and install malware, the Amazon Echo would enable hackers to covertly monitor and listen in on users and steal private data without their permission or knowledge. By removing the rubber base at the bottom of the Amazon Echo, the research team could access the 18 debug pads and directly boot into the firmware of the device, via an external SD card, and install persistent malware without leaving any physical evidence of tampering. This gained them remote root shell access and enabled them to access the "always listening" microphones. Following a full examination of the process running on the device and the associated scripts, MWR's researchers investigated how the audio media was being passed and buffered between the processes and the tools used to do so. Then they developed scripts that leveraged tools embedded on the device to stream the microphone audio to a remote server without affecting the functionality of the device itself. The raw data was then sampled via a remote device, where a decision could then be made as to play it out of the speakers on the remote device or save the audio as a WAV file. The vulnerability has been confirmed to affect the 2015 and 2016 editions of the device. The 2017 edition of the Amazon Echo is not vulnerable to this physical attack. The smaller Amazon Dot model also does not carry the vulnerability. More technical details can be found here.

2 of 114 comments (clear)

  1. News! by Ol+Olsoc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is like saying that hackers can turn a car into a transportation device.

    --
    The shepherds did so well protecting the flock that the sheep no longer believed that wolves existed.
    1. Re:News! by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The "hack" described in TFA requires physical access to the device. Anything can be compromised by someone with physical access. For instance, I can "hack" the smart-lock on your front door with my sledgehammer.