Researcher finds leading police body cameras can be easily hacked
A demonstration at the Def Con hacker convention in Las Vegas over the weekend showed that body cameras that are increasingly becoming popular with U.S. police forces can be hacked and footage stolen or replaced.
The revelation came via security researcher Josh Mitchell, who analyzed five body camera models from five different companies: Vievu LLC, Patrol Eyes, Fire Cam, Digital Ally Inc. and CeeSc, all companies that pitch body cameras to law enforcement bodies for use by police officers.
In his presentation, Mitchell said that all of the models of body cameras he had studied had vulnerabilities. With the exception of the Digital Ally device, the vulnerabilities allow a hacker to download footage off a camera, edit things out or make modifications, and then upload it again with no record of the change.
All of the devices allow a hacker to track the location of the camera and manipulate the software they run.
The ease of hacking is attributed to poor security, including the use of mundane and easy-to-guess network addresses as well as a failure to use cryptographic mechanisms to confirm that firmware updates or uploaded videos are legitimate.
“With some of these vulnerabilities — it’s just appalling,” Mitchell told Wired. “These videos can be as powerful as something like DNA evidence, but if they’re not properly protected there’s the potential that the footage could be modified or replaced. I can connect to the cameras, log in, view media, modify media, make changes to the file structures. Those are big issues.”
Mitchell also warned that in addition to the issues around the manipulation of footage, the body cameras could also serve as a potential gateway to introduce malware into police networks that could lead to ransomware attacks, data theft and cryptojacking.
The global body-worn camera market is expected to grow to aboout $990 million by 2023, according to Market Research Future, and the market has already seen its share of acquisitions and mergers. Given that the primary consumers in the space are law enforcement, it would logically suggest that security should be a high priority, but so far it appears that it’s anything but.
Photo: Tony Webster/Wikimedia Commons
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