"Do not hack the elevators here,Poor Things please."
Will Caruanais on stage at the annual DEF CON hacking convention in Las Vegas, and with a quick disclaimer and mischievous grin, he's implored the crowd to behave. Behaving, of course, is not why anyone went to a talk on hacking elevator phones.
According to Caruana's talk, Phreaking Elevators, the emergency phones in elevators around the world are poorly, if at all, protected from potential abuse. Why does that matter? What trouble can you get up to with an elevator phone, anyway? Quite a lot, it turns out.
For starters, anyone who is so inclined can dial into the phones — all you need is the number (which in some cases you can find online) — thus giving an attacker the ability to listen in on any conversation happening within.
Imagine all the fun stuff you might hear being discussed in the elevators of a Fortune 500 company.
But that's not all. As Caruana explained, it's quite easy to remotely gain control of elevator phones.
"No one ever changes the password," he explained as he flashed a slide of elevator default passwords. "No one."
And once you have control of the phones? Well, if you happen to be malicious, Caruana says you can prevent the phones from operating — rendering them useless in a real emergency.
Or, if you're just after cash, you can force the phones to place calls to specific numbers. To drive the seriousness of this move home, Caruana laid out a not so hypothetical scenario with a real university that has 60 elevators.
"Each of those elevators has their own telephone line," read a slide. By forcing those phones to call a predetermined 900-number that you control, 24 hours a day, you stand to make millions.
But the crowd of hackers who attended Caruana's talk definitely shouldn't try any of this at the hotels and casinos hosting DEF CON. As to where they should try it? Caruana didn't say, although he did include a photo of the Trump International Hotel in his presentation.
SEE ALSO: Turns out your office printer is a huge cybersecurity riskSo the next time you're in an elevator, remember to watch what you say. You never know who's listening — or using the humble emergency phone to get rich while you twiddle your thumbs and stare at the ceiling.
Topics Cybersecurity
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Trump says he represents Pittsburgh, not Paris, but, um, well...
Girl accidentally eats chips covered in dead ants because she thought they were pepper
Mom and daughter's text convo about tampons rips into the patriarchy
The iPhone 7 Plus won't be available in Apple Stores this Friday
Celtic vs. Bayern Munich 2025 livestream: Watch Champions League for free
Here's how Airbnb is trying to convince its hosts to join its fight against New York state
Table tennis player who lost his arms as a child epitomizes the Paralympics spirit
Vital campaign #StopTheStack wants chicken parmigiana served correctly
Houston Rockets vs. Dallas Mavericks 2025 livestream: Watch NBA online
Xiaomi to launch its affordable Mi Air Purifier 2 in India next week
PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds Mini
Bella Hadid took a tumble on the runway during New York Fashion Week
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。