Tag Archive for: cellular

New malware turns your computer into a cellular antenna

A group of Israeli researchers have improved on a way to steal data from air-gapped computers, thought to be safer from attack due to their isolation from the Internet.

They’ve figured out how to turn the computer into a cellular transmitter, leaking bits of data that can be picked up by a nearby low-end mobile phone.

While other research has shown it possible to steal data this way, some of those methods required some hardware modifications to the computer. This attack uses ordinary computer hardware to send out the cellular signals.

Their research, which will be featured next week at the 24th USENIX Security Symposium in Washington, D.C., is the first to show it’s possible to steal data using just specialized malware on the computer and the mobile phone.

To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here

Network World Security

Android cellular voice channel used as new covert channel to leak info, spread … – Computerworld


Computerworld

Android cellular voice channel used as new covert channel to leak info, spread
Computerworld
The test repeated the attacker's caller ID being recognized without showing up on the victim's screen, but the rootkit, acting as a botnet, listened for a command and then executed it. The attacker used the researcher's modem to send a command to

android botnet – read more

Solar powered Blue Cell provides cellular backhaul without wires

As we mentioned in our earlier coverage of LINK, Bell Labs is expecting that the near future will bring a lot of growth in cellular devices, like smart appliances and sensors. Part of its solution to this flood of new devices is to give them their own chunk of the spectrum to keep them from getting in the way of user-driven devices, like phones and tablets. But that’s only part of the solution; phone and tablet traffic is going to climb as well.

The solution there is simply to create more cells so that there are fewer devices talking to a single base tower. But adding more access points isn’t a simple matter. Each point requires power and a network connection, and constructing large towers can be a headache of siting permits and contracts. To address these problems, a research effort at Bell Labs called “Blue Cell” is attempting to simplify cellular access points by getting rid of the wires.

As solar panel prices have plunged, getting rid of the power cord has gotten a lot easier. Of course, siting a large solar panel can be just as much trouble as siting a cell phone tower, so one of the major goals of the research was to reduce the energy requirements of a cellular access point. Examining the existing hardware, engineers found that the biggest energy draw was the digital signal processor, which converts the cellular signal into something that can be sent over network cables.

Read 3 remaining paragraphs | Comments


Ars Technica » Technology Lab

Gigabit cellular networks could happen with 24GHz spectrum, FCC says

Even The Flash can’t deliver gigabit speed data networks.
JD Hancock

The Federal Communications Commission is starting to plan for cellular networks that can send users gigantic streams of data, but there are technical challenges to be solved and years of work ahead.

A Notice of Inquiry issued unanimously by the commission on Friday identifies frequencies of 24GHz and above as being able to provide gigabit or even 10Gbps speed. This would be a major change because today’s cellular networks use frequencies from 600MHz to 3GHz, with so-called “beachfront spectrum” under 1GHz being the most desirable because it can be used to deliver data over long distances. AT&T and Verizon Wireless control the most beachfront spectrum.

“It was long assumed that higher spectrum frequencies—like those above 24 GHz—could not support mobile services due to technological and practical limitations,” the FCC said in a press release. “New technologies are challenging that assumption and promise to facilitate next generation mobile service—what some call ‘5G’—with the potential to dramatically increase wireless broadband speeds.”

Read 11 remaining paragraphs | Comments


Ars Technica » Technology Lab