God Mode On: How Kaspersky attacked a vehicle’s head unit modem


Kaspersky researchers conducted a security assessment of a modern System-on-Chip (SoC), Unisoc UIS7862A, which features an integrated 2G/3G/4G modem. This SoC can be found in various mobile devices by multiple vendors or, more interestingly, in the head units of modern Chinese vehicles, which are becoming increasingly common on the roads.

The head unit is one of a car’s key components, and a breach of its information security poses a threat to road safety, as well as the confidentiality of user data. During research, Kaspersky identified several critical vulnerabilities at various levels of the Unisoc UIS7862A modem’s cellular protocol stack. This article discusses a stack-based buffer overflow vulnerability in the 3G RLC protocol implementation (CVE-2024-39432).

Read more…
Source: Kaspersky


Sign up for the Cyber Security Review Newsletter
The latest cyber security news and insights delivered right to your inbox


Related:

  • FBI warns about snoopy smart TVs spying on you

    December 3, 2019

    She laughed. I laughed. The TV laughed. I shot the TV. “Blasted Decepticons!” That’s how a popular meme went after the Transformer movies hit it big. Today, it’s not so funny. A recent FBI report warned smart TV users that hackers can also take control of your unsecured TV. “At the low end of the risk spectrum, they can ...

  • Android: New StrandHogg vulnerability is being exploited in the wild

    December 2, 2019

    Security researchers from Promon, a Norwegian firm specialized in in-app security protections, said they identified a bug in the Android operating system that lets malicious apps hijack legitimate app, and perform malicious operations on their behalf. In a comprehensive report published today, the research team said the vulnerability can be used to trick users into granting intrusive permissions ...

  • Exploit code published for dangerous Apache Solr remote code execution flaw

    November 25, 2019

    Confusion still surrounds a security bug that the Apache Solr team patched over the summer, which turns out it’s actually much more dangerous than anyone thought. Apache Solr is a Java-based open-source search engine, initially developed to add search functionality to the CNET website. The project was donated to the Apache Software Foundation in 2006, from where ...

  • Critical Flaws in VNC Threaten Industrial Environments

    November 22, 2019

    The open-source Virtual Network Computing (VNC) project, often found in industrial environments, is plagued with 37 different memory-corruption vulnerabilities – many of which are critical in severity and some of which could result in remote code execution (RCE). According to researchers at Kaspersky, they potentially affect 600,000 web-accessible servers in systems that use the code. The ...

  • High-Severity Windows UAC Flaw Enables Privilege Escalation

    November 20, 2019

    Researchers disclosed details of a high-severity Microsoft Windows vulnerability that could give attackers elevated privileges – ultimately allowing them to install programs, and view, change or delete data. The bug stems from User Account Control (UAC), a security feature of Windows within Secure Desktop which helps prevent unauthorized changes to the operating system. “With UAC fully ...

  • New Roboto botnet emerges targeting Linux servers running Webmin

    November 20, 2019

    A cybercrime group is enslaving Linux servers running vulnerable Webmin apps into a new botnet that security researchers are currently tracking under the name of Roboto. The botnet’s appearance dates back to this summer and is linked to the disclosure of a major security flaw in a web app installed on more than 215,000 servers — ...