Saturday, December 22, 2007

Security: Wi-Fi Routers Are Vulnerable to Viruses

Wi-Fi Routers Are Vulnerable to Viruses
New Scientist (12/22/07) Merali, Zeeya
Indiana University in Bloomington researcher Steven Myers has been investigating how a virus could be spread between wireless routers. "We forget that routers are mini-computers," Myers says. "They have memory, they are networked, and they are programmable." However, routers are not usually scanned for viruses or protected by firewalls, and while Myers says there are no known viruses that target routers, they are still easy targets. Routers within about 100 meters would be able to spread viruses to one another and create a vast network for viruses. While routers normally do not communicate with each other, it would be easy for hackers to create a virus that enables routers to communicate. Myers used records on the location of Wi-Fi routers around Chicago, Manhattan, San Francisco, Boston, and parts of Indianapolis to create a simulation of how a router attack might spread. In each simulated city, viruses were able to jump between routers lacking high-security encryption within 45 meters of each other. The virus spread surprisingly fast, with most of the tens of thousands of routers becoming infected within 48 hours. The geography of the cities affected how the virus spread, with rivers and bays acting as "natural firewalls." Routers can be protected by changing the password from the default setting and enabling high-security WPA encryption. University of Cambridge computer scientist Ross Anderson says the study exposes a more significant problem in that all electronics, including phones, routers, and even microwaves, are being built with software that could potentially become infected.
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