Attackers armed with just a fax number can exploit flaws in fax machines to potentially seize control of a company or home network.
New research from Check Point Software Technologies shows how organisations and individuals could be hacked via their fax machines, using newly-discovered vulnerabilities in the communication protocols used in tens of millions of fax devices globally.
The Check Point research demonstrated the vulnerabilities in the popular HP Officejet Pro All-in-One fax printers. The same protocols are also used by many other vendors’ faxes and multifunction printers, and in online fax services such as fax2email, so it is believed these could also be vulnerable to attack by the same method.
Following discovery of the vulnerabilities, Check Point shared the findings with HP, which was quick to respond and to develop a software patch for its printers.
Although not often perceived as modern-day technology, there are over 45-million fax machines in use in businesses globally, with 17-billion faxes sent every year.
Fax is still widely used in several Industry sectors such as healthcare, legal, banking and real estate, where organisations store and process vast amounts of highly sensitive personal data.
The UK’s National Health Service alone has more than 9 000 fax machines in regular use for sending patient data.
In many countries, emails are not considered as evidence in courts of law, so fax is used when handling certain business and legal processes.
Nearly half of all laser printers sold in Europe are multifunction devices which include fax capability.
“Many companies may not even be aware they have a fax machine connected to their network, but fax capability is built into many multifunction office and home printers,” says Yaniv Balmas, group manager: security research at Check Point. “This research shows how these overlooked devices can be targeted by criminals and used to take over networks to breach data or disrupt operations.
“It’s critical that organisations protect themselves against these possible attacks by updating their fax machines with the latest patches and separating them from other devices on their networks,” Balmas adds.
“It’s a powerful reminder that in the current, complex fifth-generation attack landscape, organizations cannot overlook the security of any part of their corporate networks.”
Once an attacker obtains an organisation’s fax number (which is easily obtainable from corporate websites), they end a specially-created image file by fax to the target. The vulnerabilities enable malware (such as ransomware, crypto-miners or spyware) coded into the image file, which the fax machine decodes and uploads to its memory.
The malware can then potentially breach sensitive data or cause disruption by spreading across any networks to which the fax machine is connected.
To minimise the security risk, Check Point advises that organisations check for available firmware updates for their fax devices and apply them.
Businesses are also urged to place fax devices on a secure network segment separated from applications and servers that carry sensitive information. That will limit the ability of malware to spread across networks.