Thousands of vulnerable TP-Link routers at risk of remote hijack from freemexy's blog
Thousands of TP-Link routers are vulnerable to a bug that can be used to remotely take control of the device, but it took more than a year for the company to publish the patches on its website.outdoor lte cpe modem
The vulnerability allows any low-skilled attacker to remotely gain full access to an affected router. The exploit relies on the router’s default password to work, which many don’t change.
In the worst-case scenario, an attacker could target vulnerable devices on a massive scale, using a similar mechanism to how botnets like Mirai worked — by scouring the web and hijacking routers using default passwords like “admin” and “pass.”
Andrew Mabbitt, founder of U.K. cybersecurity firm Fidus Information
Security, first discovered and disclosed the remote code execution bug
to TP-Link in October 2017. TP-Link released a patch a few weeks later
for the vulnerable WR940N router, but Mabbitt warned TP-Link again in
January 2018 that another router, TP-Link’s WR740N, was also vulnerable
to the same bug because the company reused vulnerable code between
devices.
TP-Link said the vulnerability was quickly patched in both
routers. But when we checked, the firmware for WR740N wasn’t available
on the website.
When asked, a TP-Link spokesperson said the update was “currently available when requested from tech support,” but wouldn’t explain why. Only after TechCrunch reached out, TP-Link updated the firmware page to include the latest security update.Routers have long been notorious for security problems. At the heart of any network, any flaw affecting a router can have disastrous effects on every connected device. By gaining complete control over the router, Mabbitt said an attacker could wreak havoc on a network. Modifying the settings on the router affects everyone who’s connected to the same network, like altering the DNS settings to trick users into visiting a fake page to steal their login credentials.
TP-Link declined to disclose how many potentially vulnerable routers it had sold, but said that the WR740N had been discontinued a year earlier in 2017. When we checked two search engines for exposed devices and databases, Shodan and Binary Edge, each suggested there are anywhere between 129,000 and 149,000 devices on the internet — though the number of vulnerable devices is likely far lower.
The Wall