A new report reveals that common home routers from Netgear, Linksys, D-Link and other vendors contain serious security vulnerabilities that even updates don’t fix. While Linux can be a very secure OS in theory, researchers have found that many of these vulnerable routers are powered by very old versions of Linux that lack support and are riddled with security issues as a result. . A security review of 127 popular home routers found most contained at least one critical security flaw, according to researchers. The “Home Router Security Report” (PDF) by Peter Weidenbach and Johannes vom Dorp—both from the German think tank Fraunhofer Institute–found that not only did all of the routers they examined have flaws, many “are affected by hundreds of known vulnerabilities,” the researchers said. On average, the routers analyzed–—by vendors such as D-Link, Netgear, ASUS, Linksys, TP-Link and Zyxel—were affected by 53 critical-rated vulnerabilities (CVE), with even the most “secure” device of the bunch having 21 CVEs, according to the report. Researchers did not list the specific vulnerabilities. The link for this article located at Threatpost is no longer available. . An analysis of 150 widely-used home routers uncovered significant vulnerabilities that persist even after manufacturer patches.. Home Router Security, Vulnerability Report, Netgear Issues, D-Link Security, Linksys Flaws. . Brittany Day
An email-based attack spotted in Brazil recently employed an unusual but potent technique to spy on a victim. The technique exploited security flaws in home routers to gain access to the administrator console. Once there, the hackers changed the routers The link for this article located at IT World is no longer available. . Cyber intruders employed an innovative tactic to leverage vulnerabilities in networking hardware, successfully breaching the management interface. Uncover the specifics.. household Router Attacks, Cybersecurity Trends, Router Security Issues. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
DNS providers Nominum have published new data on DNS-based DDoS amplification attacks that are using home and small office routers as a jumping off point.. The provider said that in February alone, more than five million home routers were used to generate attack traffic; that number represents more than one-fifth of the 24 million routers online that have open DNS proxies. The link for this article located at ThreatPost is no longer available. . In March, a staggering six million IoT devices were compromised for DDoS attacks, highlighting a significant cybersecurity vulnerability.. Home Router Risks, DNS Amplification, DDoS Threats, Network Vulnerability. . Dave Wreski
They have demonstrated that users could open up their router's traffic as a result of visiting a web page loaded with malicious javascript. The researchers said, "Settings on the router can be changed, including the DNS servers used by members of small, quickly erected internal networks. The attacks do not exploit any vulnerabilities in the user's browser. Instead, all they require is that the browser run JavaScript and Java Applets." While the threat to home routers is real, said the researchers, no actual attacks have so far taken place. Users would also first have to be persuaded to visit a malicious website for any attack to take place. . . Individuals face dangers since residential networking devices can be exploited remotely through harmful codes embedded in websites.. home routers security, remote attack prevention, javascript risks. . Benjamin D. Thomas
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