A group of researchers launched an aerial security scanning project relying
on ZigBee-sniffing drone to map online Internet of Things.

Drones are powerful machines and security experts are imagining day by day
new usage scenarios. A group of security experts (Joshua Wright, Ryan
Speers, Ricky Melgares, and Travis Goodspeed) are exploiting a
ZigBee-sniffing drone to map online Internet of Things devices to build a
searchable archive.

A team of researchers at the Praetorian firm has started a project to
analyze the security of internet-of-things devices using the
popular ZigBeecommunications protocol.

The goal of the researchers is to build a SHODAN-like search engine
specialized for the internet of things devices, highlighting their security
vulnerabilities.

“At its core, this project is driven by exploration,” explained the
researchers. “Where are these things? Who made them? What do they do? Are
they secure? These are some of the questions we hope to answer.” “The first
step of our exploration involves locating and fingerprinting ZigBee-enabled
smart devices and networks. We’re starting local and expanding from here.
It’s a big world to explore and billions of things to discover.”

The experts published on the official page of the project a real-time
tracker that allows to see where is flying the drone.

The experts have already uncovered more than 1600 unique internet of things
devices, 453 of them are made by Sony, and 110 by Philips.

The experts are analyzing for each device security settings, manufacturer
ID, channels, and other attributes. The researchers want to extend the use
of drones to other cities and include data collected in their archive. For
this reason they are planning to release the open-source blueprints for the
project to allow another team of researchers to contribute to the
initiative.

The drone is able to log the locations of Internet of Things devices within
a 100-meter range.

“ZigBee is buzzing all around us, everywhere, everyday. In order to listen
in on conversations taking place between machines, we’ve developed an
autonomous, hand-held device that speaks the ZigBee language. It helps us
humans better understand the conversations going on around us—a translator
of sorts. The device is equipped with several ZigBee radios for
communicating with the devices around it and an integrated GPS to
triangulate the location of each device. It’s self-powered, weighs about
250g, and has software that makes it fully autonomous. While in operation,
the device captures and logs the locations of all smart devices it finds
within range (approximately 30-100 meters). Today, it can be held in your
hand while taking a stroll around town or it can sit in your car while
driving. Soon it will take flight on a drone.” the researchers explain on
the web site of the project.

The researcher used a six rotor drone equipped with ZigBee radios for
communicating with Internet of Things devices and a GPS device to track
their position.

“Very soon, we’ll be releasing a full how-to build guide for our device,
along with a release of the code the drives it, so other passionate
engineers and hackers interested in ZigBee can start listening in to the
machines around them,” the team says.

Stay tuned
NforceIT

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