iTnews
  • Home
  • News
  • Technology
  • Security

Mobile charging stations steal data from devices

By Darren Pauli
Aug 22 2011 1:51PM
Follow google news

USB mode silently comes to life.

Security researchers have demonstrated how data can be stolen from Windows, Android and Apple devices by unassuming power charging towers.

Mobile charging stations steal data from devices

In an attack demonstrated at the Defcon hacking conference, mobile phone charging units were rigged to pull data from phones plugged into them.

They were laced with different power charging adaptors to make them more appealing.

Some stock phones were safe since they deactivated USB mode when they were powered off, but others were not so lucky.

Many jailbroken and modified devices activated USB functions when  they were plugged in, or simply rebooted.

That gave security researchers Brian Markus, Joseph Mlodzianowski and Robert Rowley the access they needed to pull data, though they instead served victims with a warning.

“If the phone died due to lack of power, in most cases the phone would boot up upon
plugging it in, then expose the data,” Marcus said.

Three hundred and sixty four people fell for the trick. Each was served with a message that warned of the dangers of using public power charging stations.

The researchers were still crunching over the findings, however Markus said specifications that may mean USB modes were silently actived included the platform and version of operating system and root kits and jailbreaks used, whether custom systems like Android ROMs were used, and the drivers loaded on the host.

Markus said the team was to his knowlegde the first to expose the threat, but said he was suspcious “of certain power kiosks”.

“Our goal is to promote security awareness.  While we do have several other variants of this demo that shows what could happen, we demo them in a responsible way.”

Add iTnews as your trusted source

Add iTnews As Your Trusted Source Add iTnews As Your Trusted Source
Got a news tip for our journalists? Share it with us anonymously here.

Copyright © SC Magazine, Australia

Tags:
androidappleblackberrydefconexploitsgooglehardwareiphonemicrosoftnokiasecuritywindows

Related Articles

  • Anthropic releases Mythos-class model for public use Anthropic releases Mythos-class model for public use
  • Apple bumps up security in fresh operating system releases Apple bumps up security in fresh operating system releases
  • Meta accuses NSO Group of violating court order by WhatsApp spear phishing Meta accuses NSO Group of violating court order by WhatsApp spear phishing
  • Researchers build self-replicating AI worm with BYO LLM Researchers build self-replicating AI worm with BYO LLM
Join our WhatsApp Channel

Partner Content

From test case to control tower: How DXC and ServiceNow are governing enterprise AI at scale
Promoted Content From test case to control tower: How DXC and ServiceNow are governing enterprise AI at scale
CommBank creates opportunities for technologists to upskill  with frontier AI companies
Partner Content CommBank creates opportunities for technologists to upskill with frontier AI companies
Intelligence × Trust: the equation that will decide Australia's AI winners
Promoted Content Intelligence × Trust: the equation that will decide Australia's AI winners
Why resilient communications are becoming critical infrastructure for modern enterprise IT
Promoted Content Why resilient communications are becoming critical infrastructure for modern enterprise IT

Sponsored Whitepapers

Agile in the AI Era: why projects still fail
Agile in the AI Era: why projects still fail
When Technology Becomes the Blocker: Unlocking Real Outcomes from AI and Cloud
When Technology Becomes the Blocker: Unlocking Real Outcomes from AI and Cloud
High-volume data sources for AI-driven security analytics
High-volume data sources for AI-driven security analytics
How healthcare organisations can get more value from cloud
How healthcare organisations can get more value from cloud
1 in 3 companies lose SaaS data. Here’s how to prevent it
1 in 3 companies lose SaaS data. Here’s how to prevent it

Events

  • iTnews State of Security Breakfast iTnews State of Security Breakfast
  • iTnews State of Data & AI Breakfast iTnews State of Data & AI Breakfast
  • The 2026 iAwards The 2026 iAwards
  • Integrate 2026 Integrate 2026
  • Security Exhibition & Conference Security Exhibition & Conference
Share on Facebook Share on LinkedIn Share on Whatsapp Email A Friend

Most Read Articles

Anthropic opens Claude Mythos Preview AI program to Australia

Anthropic opens Claude Mythos Preview AI program to Australia

Defence says Palantir is "sandboxed" in its environment

Defence says Palantir is "sandboxed" in its environment

Services Australia describes fraud, debt-related machine learning use cases

Services Australia describes fraud, debt-related machine learning use cases

Researchers build self-replicating AI worm with BYO LLM

Researchers build self-replicating AI worm with BYO LLM

techpartner.news logo
Sydney-based AI-cloud waste startup raises $3m
Sydney-based AI-cloud waste startup raises $3m
Brennan uses NiCE to modernise its contact centre
Brennan uses NiCE to modernise its contact centre
Impact Awards: Tecala slashes customer response times for fintech IQumulate
Impact Awards: Tecala slashes customer response times for fintech IQumulate
Interactive introduces private cloud platform
Interactive introduces private cloud platform
Digital61 expands cybersecurity portfolio
Digital61 expands cybersecurity portfolio
All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in any form without prior authorisation.
Your use of this website constitutes acceptance of nextmedia's Privacy Policy and Terms & Conditions.