A Russian security researcher divulged the details about a backdoor mechanism for devices containing HiSilicon chips.
What happened?
Vladislav Yarmak, the Russian researcher, published about the backdoor mechanism he discovered in HiSilicon chips.
The researcher did not report the issue to HiSilicon as he lacked trust in the vendor’s intention about fixing it.
How the backdoor works?
The backdoor can be exploited by sending a series of commands over TCP port 9530 to the vulnerable devices.
PoC release
Vladislav Yarmak has scripted a Proof-of-Concept (PoC) code for users to test if their smart device is supported by HiSilicon system-on-chip (SoC), or not. If that SoC is vulnerable to attacks, it can enable its Telnet service.
In case a device is found to be vulnerable, the Russian researcher strongly suggested to replace the device equipment immediately.
To those who cannot afford a new device, the researcher has a suggestion for them as well. They "should completely restrict network access to these devices to trusted users," especially on device ports 23/tcp, 9530/tcp, 9527/tcp—the exploitable ports.
Further, the PoC code is also available on GitHub.
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