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Airline hacker case points to deeper cyber issues

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Airline hacker case points to deeper cyber issues

(Reuters) — Security researcher Chris Roberts made headlines last month when he was hauled off a plane in New York by the FBI and accused of hacking into flight controls via his underseat entertainment unit.

Other security researchers say Mr. Roberts — who was quoted by the FBI as saying he once caused “a sideways movement of the plane during a flight” — has helped draw attention to a wider issue: that the aviation industry has not kept pace with the threat hackers pose to increasingly computer-connected airplanes.

Through his lawyer, Mr. Roberts said his only interest had been to “improve aircraft security.”

“This is going to drive change. It will force the hand of organizations (in the aviation industry),” says Jonathan Butts, a former U.S. Air Force researcher who now runs a company working on IT security issues in aviation and other industries.

As the aviation industry adopts communication protocols similar to those used on the Internet to connect cockpits, cabins and ground controls, it leaves itself open to the vulnerabilities bedeviling other industries — from finance to oil and gas to medicine.

“There's this huge issue staring us in the face,” says Brad Haines, a friend of Mr. Roberts and a security researcher focused on aviation. “Are you going to shoot the messenger?”

More worrying than people like Mr. Roberts, said Mark Gazit, CEO of Israel-based security company ThetaRay, are the hackers probing aircraft systems on the quiet. His team found Internet forum users claiming to have hacked, for example, into cabin food menus, ordering free drinks and meals.

That may sound harmless enough, but Mr. Gazit has seen a similar pattern of trivial exploits evolve into more serious breaches in other industries. “It always starts this way,” he says.

Anxious airlines

The red flags raised by Mr. Roberts' case are already worrying some airlines, says Ralf Cabos, a Singapore-based specialist in inflight entertainment systems.

One airline official at a recent trade show, he said, feared the growing trend of offering inflight WiFi allowed hackers to gain remote access to the plane. Another senior executive demanded that before discussing any sale, vendors must prove their inflight entertainment systems do not connect to critical flight controls.

Panasonic Corp. and Thales S.A., whose inflight entertainment units Mr. Roberts allegedly compromised, declined to answer detailed questions on their systems, but both said they take security seriously and their devices were certified as secure.

Airplane maker Boeing Co. says that while such systems do have communication links, “the design isolates them from other systems on planes performing critical and essential functions.” European rival Airbus said its aircraft are designed to be protected from “any potential threats coming from the In-Flight-Entertainment System, be it from Wi-Fi or compromised seat electronic boxes.”

Steve Jackson, head of security at Qantas Airways Ltd., said the airline's “extremely stringent security measures” would be “more than enough to mitigate any attempt at remote interference with aircraft systems.”

Circumventing

But experts question whether such systems can be completely isolated. An April report by the U.S. General Accountability Office quoted four cyber security experts as saying firewalls “could be hacked like any other software and circumvented,” giving access to cockpit avionics — the machinery that pilots use to fly the plane.

That itself reflects doubts about how well an industry used to focusing on physical safety understands cyber security, where the threat is less clear and constantly changing.

The U.S. National Research Council this month issued a report on aviation communication systems saying that while the Federal Aviation Administration, the U.S. regulator, realized cyber security was an issue, it “has not been fully integrated into the agency's thinking, planning and efforts.”

The chairman of the research team, Steven Bellovin of Columbia University, said the implications were worrying, not just for communication systems but for the computers running an aircraft. “The conclusion we came to was they just didn't understand software security, so why would I think they understand software avionics?” he said in an interview.

Slow response

This, security researchers say, can be seen in the slow response to their concerns.

The International Civil Aviation Organization last year highlighted long-known vulnerabilities in a new aircraft positioning communication system, ADS-B, and called for a working group to be set up to tackle them.

Researchers like Mr. Haines have shown that ADS-B, a replacement for radar and other air traffic control systems, could allow a hacker to remotely give wrong or misleading information to pilots and air traffic controllers.

And that's just the start. Aviation security consultant Mr. Butts said his company, QED Secure Solutions, had identified vulnerabilities in ADS-B components that could give an attacker access to critical parts of a plane.

But since presenting his findings to vendors, manufacturers and the industry's security community six months ago he's had little or no response.

“This is just the tip of the iceberg,” he says.

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