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Fibaro flummoxed, Georgia courts held for ransom, and more

Plus, Florida Man out of a job for paying off hackers

Roundup Between the plentiful beverages and copious amounts of meat, pretty much everyone in the US is hung over from Independence Day in one form or another, so let's jump right into the security news.

When is a backup not a backup? When it's for hacked Fibaro smarthome gear

The popular Fibaro smart-home system holds a cocktail of security holes that together let bad guys take complete control.

Kaspersky's research team says combination of authorization bypass, remote code execution, and SQL injection flaws would allow an attacker to modify the cloud backups for a given Fibaro Home Center in such a way that, when installed, would allow for remote control of the entire smart home system.

Using a Kaspersky colleague as a willing participant, Cheremushkin's team said they were able to modify and re-upload a backup of the firmware. From there, the mark could be sent an email or other alert telling them to restore from a backup, loading the poisoned code.

"One of the main tasks of the device we investigated is to integrate all smart things so that the home owner could manage them from Home Center itself," Kaspersky ICS CERT team member Pavel Cheremushkin explained.

"A 'smart thing' here can be not just a light bulb or kettle, but vital safety equipment: for example, alarms, window/door/gate opening and closing mechanisms, surveillance cameras, heating/air conditioning systems, etc."

Fortunately, Kaspersky and Fibaro say the vulnerabilities have since been patched with no reports of attacks in the wild.

OceanLotus smells a RatSnif

BlackBerry Cylance researchers say an hacking operation known as OceanLotus has rolled out a nasty new series of attack tools.

Known as RatSnif, the new kit is actually a series of remote access trojans that the OceanLotus crew is using to break into networks and steal data from targets in the Asia region.

"BlackBerry Cylance threat researchers have analyzed the Ratsnif trojans, which offer a veritable swiss-army knife of network attack techniques," the researchers say.

"The trojans, under active development since 2016, combine capabilities like packet sniffing, gateway/device ARP poisoning, DNS poisoning, HTTP injection, and MAC spoofing."

7-11 Japan takes "always open" too far

An attempt by the Japanese branch of convenience store chain 7-11 to offer mobile payments took a disastrous turn this week thanks to a glaring security oversight.

Yahoo! News! Japan! reports that the 7Pay system, a smartphone payment app, was pulled just one day after its introduction because of a rash of account thefts and fraudulent charges.

The problem lay in the password reset system. The app allowed a user to armed with just an email address, date of birth, and phone number to not only reset a password, but have the reset message sent to a different email address without the owner getting any sort of notification.

As you might imagine, this lead to an almost immediate outbreak of thefts, as a bit of simple searching or social engineering would give an attacker everything they needed to hijack an account and then use it to purchase items at 7-11 stores.

Maryland reports government database breach

The US state of Maryland says it has lost personally identifiable information on some 78,000 people who were enrolled in two of its unemployment assistance programs.

The Department of Labor said that earlier this year it believed some of its records had been exposed and called in the state's IT service. This lead to the revelation that one of the department's databases had been left accessible to the open internet.

"The LWIS files impacted were from 2009, 2010, and 2014. These files possibly contained first names, last names, social security numbers, dates of birth, city or county of residence, graduation dates and record numbers," the DOL said.

"The files impacted on the unemployment insurance service database were from 2013 and possibly contained first names, last names, and social security numbers."

So far, the DOL says it has found no indications of a compromise.

Georgia court system latest ransomware victim

Yet another local government has reported having its systems compromised by ransomware.

The state of Georgia has confirmed that part of the online records system for the state courts was taken offline after some of its systems were infected with ransomware. This, in turn, lead to servers being unplugged in order to quarantine them from the malware.

The state said that no personally identifiable information was being stored on any of the affected systems and all of the documents on this particular service were all publicly available.

Speaking of ransomware...

Lake City IT boss fired for ransomware payment

Last week, word broke that the town of Lake City, FL, had opted to pay out a ransomware demand in order to get their data back. It turns out that decision is going to cost at least one person their job.

Local news reports that the mayor of the city has made the decision to terminate one employee who (presumably) was behind the decision to cough up the requested Bitcoin ransom rather than opt to wipe and restore the locked machines.

Android App making bogus purchases

An Android app with around 100 million installs was caught serving up ads and making fraudulent purchases.

Researchers with Upstream said that the 4shared file sharing app has been running background code to silently generate false clicks for ad fraud and small purchases without user consent or notification. The fraudulent activity was traced to a component made by a third-party affiliate and has been offline since April. ®

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