CRNov 20, 2021

You Overtrust Your Printer

arXiv:2111.10645v18 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses printer security vulnerabilities for organizations, emphasizing compliance with GDPR and reducing fines, but it is incremental as it builds on known IoT security issues.

The paper investigates security risks in networked printers, identifying three post-exploitation attacks (Printjack) that can turn printers into zombies, allow unauthenticated printing to exhaust resources, and intercept data in transit, highlighting a significant data breach risk.

Printers are common devices whose networked use is vastly unsecured, perhaps due to an enrooted assumption that their services are somewhat negligible and, as such, unworthy of protection. This article develops structured arguments and conducts technical experiments in support of a qualitative risk assessment exercise that ultimately undermines that assumption. Three attacks that can be interpreted as post-exploitation activity are found and discussed, forming what we term the Printjack family of attacks to printers. Some printers may suffer vulnerabilities that would transform them into exploitable zombies. Moreover, a large number of printers, at least on an EU basis, are found to honour unauthenticated printing requests, thus raising the risk level of an attack that sees the crooks exhaust the printing facilities of an institution. There is also a remarkable risk of data breach following an attack consisting in the malicious interception of data while in transit towards printers. Therefore, the newborn IoT era demands printers to be as secure as other devices such as laptops should be, also to facilitate compliance with the General Data Protection Regulation (EU Regulation 2016/679) and reduce the odds of its administrative fines.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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