http://money.cnn.com/2013/04/08/technology/security/shodan/

Shodan: The scariest search engine on the Internet

NEW YORK (CNNMoney)

That's according to John Matherly, creator of Shodan, the scariest search 
engine on the Internet.

Unlike Google (GOOG, Fortune 500), which crawls the Web looking for websites, 
Shodan navigates the Internet's back channels. It's a kind of "dark" Google, 
looking for the servers, webcams, printers, routers and all the other stuff 
that is connected to and makes up the Internet. (Shodan's site was slow to load 
Monday following the publication of this story.)

Shodan runs 24/7 and collects information on about 500 million connected 
devices and services each month.

It's stunning what can be found with a simple search on Shodan. Countless 
traffic lights, security cameras, home automation devices and heating systems 
are connected to the Internet and easy to spot.

Shodan searchers have found control systems for a water park, a gas station, a 
hotel wine cooler and a crematorium. Cybersecurity researchers have even 
located command and control systems for nuclear power plants and a 
particle-accelerating cyclotron by using Shodan.

What's really noteworthy about Shodan's ability to find all of this -- and what 
makes Shodan so scary -- is that very few of those devices have any kind of 
security built into them.

"It's a massive security failure," said HD Moore, chief security officer of 
Rapid 7, who operates a private version of a Shodan-like database for his own 
research purposes.

Related story: Hackers take aim at key U.S. infrastructure

A quick search for "default password" reveals countless printers, servers and 
system control devices that use "admin" as their user name and "1234" as their 
password. Many more connected systems require no credentials at all -- all you 
need is a Web browser to connect to them.

In a talk given at last year's Defcon cybersecurity conference, independent 
security penetration tester Dan Tentler demonstrated how he used Shodan to find 
control systems for evaporative coolers, pressurized water heaters, and garage 
doors.

He found a car wash that could be turned on and off and a hockey rink in 
Denmark that could be defrosted with a click of a button. A city's entire 
traffic control system was connected to the Internet and could be put into 
"test mode" with a single command entry. And he also found a control system for 
a hydroelectric plant in France with two turbines generating 3 megawatts each.

Scary stuff, if it got into the wrong hands.

"You could really do some serious damage with this," Tentler said, in an 
understatement.

So why are all these devices connected with few safeguards? Some things that 
are designed to be connected to the Internet, such as door locks that can be 
controlled with your iPhone, are generally believed to be hard to find. 
Security is an afterthought.

Related story: If you're using 'Password1,' change it. Now.

A bigger issue is that many of these devices shouldn't even be online at all. 
Companies will often buy systems that can enable them to control, say, a 
heating system with a computer. How do they connect the computer to the heating 
system? Rather than connect them directly, many IT departments just plug them 
both into a Web server, inadvertently sharing them with the rest of the world.

"Of course there's no security on these things," said Matherly, "They don't 
belong on the Internet in the first place."

The good news is that Shodan is almost exclusively used for good.

Matherly, who completed Shodan more than three years ago as a pet project, has 
limited searches to just 10 results without an account, and 50 with an account. 
If you want to see everything Shodan has to offer, Matherly requires more 
information about what you're hoping to achieve -- and a payment.

Penetration testers, security professionals, academic researchers and law 
enforcement agencies are the primary users of Shodan. Bad actors may use it as 
a starting point, Matherly admits. But he added that cybercriminals typically 
have access to botnets -- large collections of infected computers -- that are 
able to achieve the same task without detection.

To date, most cyberattacks have focused on stealing money and intellectual 
property. Bad guys haven't yet tried to do harm by blowing up a building or 
killing the traffic lights in a city.

Security professionals are hoping to avoid that scenario by spotting these 
unsecured, connected devices and services using Shodan, and alerting those 
operating them that they're vulnerable. In the meantime, there are too many 
terrifying things connected to the Internet with no security to speak of just 
waiting to be attacked.  



First Published: April 8, 2013: 9:40 AM ET


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