QUOTE (tete @ Jan 25 2012, 07:42 PM)

He is taking a giant leap there. Most IDS scans traffic on all ipaddresses, thats just good security practice.
There are 75,000 printers that are publically printable-to world wide.
Something like 46 of them are governmental (of which 16 belong to the US).
I forget how many were named "Payroll"
9 belonged to universities.
Given that security hole, which is painfully obvious...
But yes.
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A smaller leap, but a believable leap as many people like bi-directional printer functions still your local anti-malware solution should stop an attack (even from the printer) IF the local firewall accepts the TCP connection to begin with.
I don't know what kind of security the target machine had.
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Also the sending the resume bit is unlikely as your spam filter should flag that email attachment as a threat.
Not really. The file that's attached is just a PDF. It's got post script in it, but what PDF
doesn't? And even if it was possible to scan the post script file to see if it contained an RFU, he says that it's possible to inject code into the printer that will generate its own RFU, thus making it impossible to scan for (without having a post script emulator in the virus/network scanner).
Even then, it can only identify that an RFU is there, but not what it does (an may prevent legitimate firmware updates) as the RFU format is closed source and under NDA.
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I have no problems with the idea though as its been possible for years and using a printer botnet is very believable especially if you can gain physical access to the building to upload your malware to the first printer. Its even more believable that this botnet could be used to send alot of spam as its pretty easy to get a mailserver to pass your email on.
The real issue is that this
type of attack isn't limited to printers. It could (potentially) work on
any network enabled peripheral device, such as your network storage drive. And it'd be neigh impossible to clean the firmware chip, as he shows that with the HP printers, the BIOS ROM chip is in fact a
flash memory chip with write capability, and the only way to get the virus off is in fact to
buy a new printer.