Warshipping (original) (raw)

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Computer security attack via package delivery

In computer network security, warshipping is using a physical package delivery service to deliver an attack vector to a target. This concept was first described[1] in 2008 at the DEF CON hacking convention by Robert Graham and David Maynor as part of a talk entitled “Bringing Sexy Back: Breaking in with Style”, that included various penetration testing methods. In their implementation, an iPhone box was modified to include a larger battery, which powered a jailbroken iPhone. A first-generation iPhone was chosen for this attack based on the reported run-time of 5 days when coupled with an external battery, whereas newer 3G iPhones of the era would reportedly run for 1½ days. A social engineering pretext was described that would trick the recipient into believing they had won an iPhone, in order to explain the shipment.

The advancement of low-power electronics, thanks in part to maker culture, has greatly increased the effectiveness of this methodology as a credible method of attacking networks. In 2019, IBM X-Force Red coined the name “Warshipping” and described an attack platform that included several low-cost components that could be combined, shipped to targets, and controlled remotely for 2–3 weeks. A solar component was also described to allow the devices to run indefinitely.[2][3]

Aspects of a modern warshipping attack include the following:

The increasing use of large, online retailers contributes to the relevancy of this attack. In 2019, the United States Postal Service reports that they deliver 484.8 million mailpieces per day.[4] The name is by analogy with wardriving and wardialling.[5]

  1. ^ "DEF CON 16 - Bringing Sexy Back - Breaking in with Style". YouTube. 25 November 2013.
  2. ^ Thomson, Iain (7 Aug 2019). "Hack-age delivery! Wardialing, wardriving... Now warshipping: Wi-Fi-spying gizmos may lurk in future parcels". www.theregister.co.uk. Retrieved 2019-08-08.
  3. ^ "Package Delivery! Cybercriminals at Your Doorstep". Security Intelligence. Retrieved 2019-08-08.
  4. ^ "One Day in the Life of the U.S. Postal Service".
  5. ^ Osborne, Charlie. "New 'warshipping' technique gives hackers access to enterprise offices". ZDNet. Retrieved 2019-08-08.