Hacker gains remote access to thousands of Chromecasts
Exploiting a Chromecast bug that's been allegedly ignored by Google for almost five years, a hacker has taken control of thousands of users’ Chromecast-connected devices.
Hacker Giraffe has remotely gained access to the TVs and smart devices of tens-of-thousands of users and displayed a pop-up that both warns of the exploit and links to a page listing the current number of affected devices.
The bug has been dubbed CastHack and utilizes the Universal Plug and Play (UPnP) functionality of some routers in order to remotely gain access to devices connected on their local networks.
Consequently, users are able to block this kind of access to their network by disabling UPnP on their router.
Teaching an old bug new tricks
While technically this latest hack is made possible via a security flaw in a users’ router, the exploit related to the Chromecast is one that has been known since the year the device launched.
In 2014, security firm Bishop Fox found that it could gain control of a Chromecast by disconnecting it from its current Wi-Fi network in what’s known as a “death” attack and reverting it to a factory state.
It was confirmed that the device was still vulnerable to these attacks in 2016 by Pen Test Partners, another cybersecurity firm.
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