Down here on terra-firma, Internet problems are a pain in the ass. Without even going into the phishing scams and the like, many computers are a hot targets for Internet savvy hackers to infiltrate.
So what happens when those problems start flying around up above us?
A recent FAA report has revealed a flaw in Boeing's new mega-plane, the 787 Dreamliner. Apparently, the computer network in the passenger compartment -- the one that gives passengers the ability to browse the Internet while flying -- is linked to the "plane's control, navigation and communication systems," according to Wired. The physical link between the two networks means that the fate of your voyage could be determined by an in=flight hacker.
That is the problem Boeing is currently facing at the moment, after a
report filed by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration exposed the
possibility that the new 787 Dreamliner may be open to hacking attacks
while mid-air.
For some time now airlines have been trying to get the Internet in
to the air, so that employees will never again be out of contact.
Boeing’s new Dreamliner is one in a line of planes that will allow
passengers that ability, to check their email and the like during their
long (or short) flights.
But a problem crept up in the implementation of such a system, or at least, in Boeing’s implementation.
According
to the “special conditions” document produced by the FAA, the network
from which passengers will be able to connect to the internet is also
connected to the plane’s navigation and communication system.
"This
is serious," said Mark Loveless, a network security analyst with
Autonomic Networks. "This isn’t a desktop computer. It's controlling
the systems that are keeping people from plunging to their deaths. So I
hope they are really thinking about how to get this right."
An internet hacker, attempting to break in to any
location, is looking for a solid link from a to b. It doesn’t need to
be much, but the smallest physical link allows an accomplished hacker
to penetrate the system. The subsequent issue on board a plane, whose
communication and navigation system is linked to ones internet, is that
a malicious hacker might be able to do some serious, possibly fatal,
damage.
The design "allows new
kinds of passenger connectivity to previously isolated data networks
connected to systems that perform functions required for the safe
operation of the airplane," says the FAA document. "Because of this new
passenger connectivity, the proposed data-network design and
integration may result in security vulnerabilities from intentional or
unintentional corruption of data and systems critical to the safety and
maintenance of the airplane."
Boeing spokeswoman Lori Gunter
made note though that the FAA document’s wording was misleading. Gunter
informed the media that the two systems were not in fact connected.
However she went on to say "There are places where the networks are not
touching, and there are places where they are.”
Boeing has
been directed by the FAA to fix these issues before the plane can be
sold, of which according to Boeing there are already 800 advanced
orders. Boeing is already working on the problem, installing firewalls
and electronic “air gaps” so that the flow of information is entirely
one way. The FAA and Boeing have already agreed upon the tests that
will be initiated during an in-flight test, tentatively scheduled for
March of this year.
Posted by Josh Hill.
http://www.wired.com/politics/security/news/2008/01/dreamliner_security