By Kevin McLaughlin, CRN
11:50 AM EDT Wed. Aug. 09, 2006
A security researcher next week plans to release code that
could enable hackers to exploit the encrypted link between BlackBerry
handhelds and servers to bypass gateway security and hit machines inside
corporate networks.
BlackBerry maker
Research In Motion (RIM) and its partners, however, say the risk is
overstated.
At last week's Defcon security conference in Las Vegas, Jesse
D'Aguanno, a consultant at Praetorian Global, a Placerville,
Calif.-based risk management firm, showed how a hacking program he
developed--called BBProxy--could allow an attacker to gain access to a
company's internal network via the encrypted connection between a
BlackBerry handheld and the
Blackberry Enterprise Server (BES).
Security vendor Secure Computing on Tuesday warned companies that
their BES deployments on internal networks could be vulnerable to a
BBProxy attack. After manually installing BBProxy or getting a user to
install it via an e-mail attachment, a hacker could piggyback the
encrypted connection between the handheld and the BES and gain access to
the internal network, according to San Jose, Calif.-based Secure.
However, the notion that BBproxy could be spread by e-mail without
user interaction is misleading, said Scott Totzke, director of the
global security group at RIM, Waterloo, Ontario. "Our attachment service
doesn't work that way. You can send and view e-mail, but the BES system
is designed to require users to manually download the application from a
Web site," he said.
"[BBProxy] isn't a hacking tool. It's an application that runs on the
BlackBerry and potentially does something malicious," Totzke added.
Although BBProxy may work in theory, RIM has addressed the issue of
over-the-air or self-installing applications with the IT policy
component of BES version 4.1, said David Bean, president
of
eAccess Solutions,
a Palatine, Ill.-based RIM partner. BES 4.1 includes policies
that can repel an attack by a self-installing or virus-infected file,
but such policies must be set up and implemented by the server
administrator, Bean added.
On its Web site, RIM has published documents that describe steps that
companies can take to protect themselves from such an exploit. Those
measures include segmenting networks and limiting third-party
application access to the
BlackBerry Enterprise solution.
Dan King, president of New West Technologies, a Portland, Ore.-based
solution provider, said he thinks it's interesting that security
researchers are announcing hacks before releasing them, which he said
helps educate companies about the risks they take by not locking down
their networks.
"Hopefully, companies will take the appropriate steps to make sure
their data is not intruded on so that they are not enabling the
proliferation of viruses and hacks by leaving their compromised systems
open and on the Internet," King said.
Original Article posted here:
http://www.crn.com/sections/breakingnews/dailyarchives.jhtml?articleId=191900160