Don't have a heart attack but your implanted defibrillator can be hacked over the air
Medical gear maker Medtronic is once again at the center of a hacker panic storm. This time, a number of its heart defibrillators, implanted in patients' chests, can, in certain circumstances, be wirelessly hijacked and reprogrammed, perhaps to lethal effect.
On Thursday, the US government's Dept of Homeland Security issued an alert over two CVE-listed vulnerabilities in Medtronic's wireless communications system Conexus, which is used by some of its heart defibrillators and their control units. Conexus exchanges data between implanted devices and their control units over the air using radio-waves, with a range of roughly 25 feet without any signal boosting.
The more serious of the flaws, CVE-2019-6538, can be potentially exploited by an attacker to meddle with data flying between the device and its controller. The Conexus protocol does not include any checks for this kind of tampering, nor performs any form of authentication. This means transmissions can be intercepted, spoofed, and modified by hackers and their nearby equipment, which can also masquerade as a control unit, in certain circumstances that we'll come to describe.