Security pest found on BlackBerry
By Joris Evers
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: August 8, 2006, 4:51 PM PDT
One of the first examples of
malicious software on BlackBerry devices has surfaced, but manufacturer
Research In Motion does not see it as a serious threat.
At the Defcon hacker confab on Saturday,
researcher Jesse D'Aguanno said he developed a program called BBProxy that,
when running on a BlackBerry, gives an attacker
entry to the network the wireless device connects to. The program exploits the
link between the handheld and the e-mail server, and it could be used to place
additional malicious code onto a network.
"A malicious person could
potentially use this back channel to move around inside of an organization
unabated and remove confidential information undetected, or use the back
channel to install malware on the network," Secure Computing, a provider
of security services, said in a media alert
Tuesday.
The BlackBerry service allows
companies to give their employees access to e-mail while they are on the road.
A typical installation includes server software that is installed on a
corporate network as well as the handhelds used to send and receive messages.
For an attack to be successful, a
BlackBerry user has to be tricked into running the malicious application. At
Defcon, D'Aguanno suggested that his program could be delivered to users
wrapped in a game of "Tic Tac Toe." "First and only BlackBerry
Trojan (horse) that I know of," D'Aguanno wrote in his presentation.
It could be the first malicious program aimed at the
BlackBerry, Scott Totzke, director of the global security group at
RIM, agreed in an interview Tuesday. However, the Waterloo, Ontario-based
company doesn't see a major threat to its customers, he said.
"There are a number of hoops
that you have to go through to make this thing possible," Totzke said. For
one, it is impossible to e-mail an application to the device; people have to
download it, he said.
"When you step back and look at
it, BlackBerry is a computing platform and able to run applications similar to
a laptop and a VPN connection," he said.
The BlackBerry can run applications,
including malicious ones, Totzke noted. To avoid that, the device offers
several settings that allow companies to protect their systems. These include
blocking the ability to run programs. Also, RIM suggests that companies put
their BlackBerry servers and e-mail servers in discrete sections of the network
to limit the connection between the two.
In anticipation of D'Aguanno's
presentation, RIM published two documents on its security Web site
that provide instructions on secure installation of a BlackBerry system and on
protection against malicious software.
D'Aguanno plans to publicly release
BBProxy in the coming weeks. RIM isn't worried. "I don't see releasing
code as much of a threat," Totzke said. "It is an example of an
application running on a BlackBerry that is designed to connect to network
resources."