Nearly two years afterSony faced a storm of criticism for
using a rootkit-like programin its
digital rights management (DRM) technology, security
researchers at F-Secure say they have discovered something similar
in Sony's Micro Vault USM-F fingerprint reader
software.
 |  |  |  |  | It is our belief that the
MicroVault software hides this folder to somehow protect the
fingerprint authentication from tampering and
bypass. Mika Stahlberg.
researcherF-Secure |
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The latest example of rootkit use was found in software that's
part of an older line of USB drives sold by Sony Electronics ,
according to Mika Stahlberg, a researcher for the Finland-based
security firm.
In the
F-Secure blog, Stahlberg wrote that the Sony
Micro Vault USM-F fingerprint reader software that comes with
the USB stick installs a driver that is hiding a directory under
'c:windows.' When enumerating files and subdirectories in the
Windows directory, he said, the directory and files inside it
are not visible through Windows API. If someone knows the name
of the directory, it is possible to enter the hidden directory
using a command prompt and it is possible to create new hidden
files.
"It is our belief that the Micro Vault software hides this
folder to somehow protect the fingerprint authentication from
tampering and bypass," he said. "It is obvious that user
fingerprints cannot be in a world writable file on the disk when we
are talking about secure authentication. However, we feel that
rootkit-like cloaking techniques are not the right way to go
here."
He did note, however, that Micro Vault with fingerprint
authentication appears to be an older product Sony may no longer be
manufacturing. Nevertheless, Stahlberg said, F-Secure researchers
did manage to find the product on sale.
F-Secure said it contacted Sony before going public with its
latest discovery, but that Sony hasn't responded. Sony did not
immediately respond to a request for comment from
SearchSecurity.com.
Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant for UK-based
security software company Sophos, said his organisation has been
unable to locate one of the USB devices in question, and that they
don't seem to be readily available in Australia and the UK. But he
did find that they can be purchased online via such sources as
Amazon.com. He declined to comment on the specifics of F-Secure's
findings, but he did express concern over the general practice of
using hidden technology as Sony has in the past.
"Hopefully, this new rootkit is not going to be as widespread as
when Sony shipped one on popular music CDs," Cluley said in an
email exchange.
In late 2005, Sony BMG Music Entertainment found itself at the
center of a media firestorm when a researcher discovered the
company was using a
rootkit-based digital rights management (DRM)
system to prevent CD copying.
Experts at the time worried that if more companies used the
technology the way Sony has, hackers could hijack such rootkits and
cause all kinds of trouble. Rootkits, tools or programs used to
mask software or network intrusions, are typically used only by
malicious hackers, they noted.