LOL
Australian Google office building hacked
The
building control system for one of Google's offices in Sydney was
hacked into by two IT security researchers who say hundreds more in
Australia are also accessible via the internet.
SMH,
7
May, 2013
A
building control system, or building
management system,
is a computer-based system used to control and monitor a building's
mechanical and electrical equipment using software. It monitors and
controls things like ventilation, air conditioning, lighting and fire
systems.
US
researchers Billy Rios and Terry McCorkle of security
firm Cylance found
that the building control system for Google's
Wharf 7 office in
Pyrmont was vulnerable after finding it on the popular hacker search
engine Shodan,
which maps out vulnerable devices on the internet.
Inside
Google's Wharf 7 office in Pyrmont, Sydney. Photo:
Supplied
A
number of Google staff moved into Wharf 7 last year after the
internet giant took up office space in the building to cope with its
expanding workforce. It is understood Google will also soon move into
one of Fairfax Media's Pyrmont office floors, as
reported by Mumbrella.
Technology
news website Wired first
reported the hacking news on Monday night.
It said the researchers were able to gain access to the Wharf 7
control system — which uses the Tridium Niagara
AX platform — by using the default password "anyonesguess".
Once
logged in, the researchers were able to see on their screen access
panels which showed buttons marked "active overrides",
"active alarms", "alarm console", "LAN
Diagram", "schedule", and a button marked "BMS
key" for Building Management System key, Wired reported.
The
building control panel showing the roof blueprint. Photo:
Cylance
It
said there was also a button marked "AfterHours Button"
with a hammer on it.
The researchers also accessed a control panel showing blueprints of the floor and roof plans, "as well as a clear view of water pipes snaked throughout the building and notations indicating the temperature of water in the pipes and the location of a kitchen leak", it said.
Despite
this, Google Australia said only its Wharf 7 heating and air
conditioning units could be controlled via the system. "We're
grateful when researchers report their findings to us," Google
Australia said in a statement to Fairfax. "We took appropriate
action to resolve this issue."
Dubbed
in an article by CNN as "the
scariest search engine on the internet",
Shodan, the search engine the researchers found the Google system on,
is primarily used by IT security researchers to discover
vulnerabilities in devices which are connected to the public
internet. Search terms like "webcam" can be entered into
Shodan, as well as a location, to find vulnerable devices online.
Speaking
to Fairfax Media late on Monday night, Rios said Cylance had
discovered thousands of building control system on the internet which
were exploitable, 100 of which were in Sydney.
"We've
discovered hospitals, banks, government buildings... all of them are
vulnerable," he said.
To
prove this, Rios provided Fairfax Media with five URLs to publicly
accessible web pages that appeared to host the building management
control systems of major Sydney organisations.
Australian
IT security researcher Troy
Hunt told
Fairfax that the management of a building control system was
generally outsourced to a third-party, and that in Google's case that
third-party appeared to have "dropped the ball" in keeping
the system secure.
"I
would imagine that the whole thing is probably run by some
outsourcing group who is responsible for managing the building,"
Hunt said. "They're responsible for the software, they've
probably got some entry points for Google staff to be able to perform
essential tasks and that's probably about the extent of the Google
relationship I would say."
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