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| In November 2003, various vulnerabilities on Bluetooth enabled mobile phones emerged, as published here. The full details of these vulnerabilities in Bluetooth can be found in the slideshow linked here. |
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Credit:
The information has been provided by Adam Laurie.
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Details of the attacks were disclosed at the Chaos Computer Club's
annual congress in Berlin - 21C3
(Video of the lecture will be on the CCC site in due course.)
The Slides from the talk can be found here: http://trifinite.org/Downloads/21c3_Bluetooth_Hacking.pdf
It was felt, as the industry had been given a full 13 months to react to the original threat discovery, and responsible manufacturers had engineered and released firmware upgrades, that the time had come for full disclosure. This became increasingly urgent as it was clear that the techniques used were becoming relatively widely known within the security community, and it could therefore be assumed that the same was true for criminal and/or malicious users.
Vendor Responses:
Nokia's response page is here: http://www.nokia.com/nokia/0,,56221,0.html
It emerged at the conference that Nokia have created a special warranty code for the Bluetooth security issues, and any affected phone, regardless of age or origin, can be upgraded under that code free of charge. This was stated by a member of the audience during the presentation, and has not yet been verified.
Known affected devices: 6310, 6310i, 8910, 8910i
Sony Ericsson have not responded directly to the author, but have stated publicly that the problem has been fixed in all affected phones. This has not been verified, and availability of firmware upgrades is unknown.
Known affected devices: T68, T68i, R520m, T610, Z1010, Z600
Motorola stated that they are committed to fixing the problem, but further details are unknown.
Known affected devices: V80, V5xx, V6xx and E398.
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