'Curse of silence' smartphone flaw disclosed

little_pob

VIP Member
VIP Member
Joined
Dec 10, 2004
Messages
8,769
Reaction score
2,480
Location
mmm....padded walls....so soft...
A denial-of-service attack that limits the number of SMS messages that can be received by Nokia smartphones has been disclosed and demonstrated.

Dubbed the "curse of silence" by German security researcher Tobias Engel, the attack occurs when Nokia Series 60 phones are sent a malformed e-mail message via SMS (Short Message Service). Engel demonstrated the attack on Tuesday at the Chaos Communication Congress in Berlin, according to a blog post by security vendor F-Secure.

An advisory made public by Engel on Tuesday gave details of the attack. After receiving a message from a sender with an e-mail address of greater than 32 characters, Nokia S60 2.6, 2.8, 3.0, and 3.1 devices are not able to receive any more SMS or MMS messages. The S60 2.6 and 3.0 devices lock up after one message, while 2.8 and 3.1 devices seize up after 11 messages.

Affected users must perform a factory reset of the handset to remedy the issue. No firmware fix was available at the time of writing. A Nokia representative told CNET News sister site ZDNet UK on Friday the company was "aware of" the vulnerability, but believed it did not pose a significant risk.

"Nokia is not currently aware of any malicious incidents on the S60 platform related to this alleged issue and we do not believe that it represents a significant risk to customers' devices," said the representative. "Nokia believes that the vulnerability may be valid for some of the S60 on Symbian OS products. We are also working with the Symbian team to further investigate the vulnerability."

Products running S60 3rd edition, feature pack 2, are unaffected, said the representative, who added that the issue can be prevented by network filtering.

"According to our knowledge, many operators are looking into and actually already implementing network filtering to prevent the issue," said the representative.

F-Secure said on Tuesday that Sony Ericsson UIQ devices may also be vulnerable to this type of attack. On Wednesday the security vendor said the vulnerability will "most likely be used by jealous boyfriends," but that support personnel "should know what to look for" in case of harassment of staff.

F-Secure added that, due to Engel's reasonable disclosure, the company had managed to test the flaw and add protection to its Mobile Security product. Engel informed Nokia and several telecommunications operators about the issue in November.

Tom Espiner of ZDNet UK reported from London.
January 2, 2009 4:33 PM PST
'Curse of silence' smartphone flaw disclosed | Security - CNET News
 
Nokia is really bad at explaining the versioning of the S60 OS. And this article doesnt help matters much :(

You can check to see if you phone is affected by looking up its version here: S60 devices
 
Nokia is really bad at explaining the versioning of the S60 OS. And this article doesnt help matters much :(

You can check to see if you phone is affected by looking up its version here: S60 devices

Ha Ha told you WM was better LOL
 
there used to be some kind of bluetooth one a while ago, like a year or two......
 
that was a weakness in the way manufacturers implmented the standards.

AFIAK, SE have never fixed it. So you can actually still exploit their phones.
 
Back
Top