News

By Lucian Constantin

July 18, 2014 12:07 PM ET

IDG News Service - Researchers are gearing up to hack an array of different home routers during a contest next month at the Defcon 22 security conference in Las Vegas.

The contest is called SOHOpelessly Broken -- a nod to the small office/home office space targeted by the products -- and follows a growing number of large scale attacks this year against routers and other home embedded systems.

The competition is organized by security consultancy firm Independent Security Evaluators and advocacy group the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), and will have two separate challenges.

The first challenge, known as Track 0, will require researchers to demonstrate exploits for previously unknown, or zero-day, vulnerabilities in a number of popular off-the-shelf consumer wireless routers.

The preselected target devices are: Linksys EA6500, ASUS RT-AC66U, TRENDnet TEW-812DRU, Netgear Centria WNDR4700, Netgear WNR3500U/WNR3500L, TP-Link TL-WR1043ND, D-Link DIR-865L and Belkin N900 DB. The EFF's upcoming Open Wireless Router firmware will also be up for hacking.

Different types of attacks will earn the researchers a different number of points. For example, exploits that result in full router control will be awarded 5,000 points, while those that only cause a denial-of-service condition or low-value information leakage will get 1,000 points. There are also penalties for attacks that require human interaction, authenticated sessions or administrative credentials.

Researchers will prepare their exploits ahead of time and are required to report the vulnerabilities they find to the affected manufacturers ahead of the actual contest. This won't influence their chance of success during the competition because the attacked routers will run specific versions of firmware that have already been announced and won't be updated.

Go here to see the original:
Home router security to be tested in Defcon contest

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