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Millions of IoT Devices Possibly Affected by ‘Devil’s Ivy’ Flaw

Millions of IoT Devices Possibly Affected by ‘Devil’s Ivy’ Flaw

A vulnerability dubbed by researchers “Devil’s Ivy,” which exists in an open source library present in the products of many companies, could affect millions of security cameras and other Internet of Things (IoT) devices.

The flaw, a stack-based buffer overflow, was discovered by IoT security startup Senrio in a camera from Axis Communications, one of the world’s largest security camera manufacturers.

The weakness, tracked as CVE-2017-9765, can be exploited to cause a denial-of-service (DoS) condition and to execute arbitrary code. Senrio has published a technical advisory and a video showing how an attacker could exploit the flaw to hijack a security camera and gain access to its video feed.

“When exploited, [the vulnerability] allows an attacker to remotely access a video feed or deny the owner access to the feed,” Senrio said in a blog post. “Since these cameras are meant to secure something, like a bank lobby, this could lead to collection of sensitive information or prevent a crime from being observed or recorded.”