Researchers are warning that legitimate anti-theft software, impacting millions of users with the activated installation on their computers, leaves systems vulnerable to remote hijack.
On Wednesday, Kaspersky Lab's security team published a report on Absolute Computrace, a product developed by Austin, Texas-based Absolute Software which “allows organizations to persistently track and secure all of their endpoints within a single cloud-based console,” the product page for the software says.
According to Kaspersky researchers, however, it's the fact that Absolute's tracking software is pre-installed in the firmware of laptops and desktops, and difficult to remove or disable for users, that makes its security flaws that much more concerning.
The report said that remote takeover of impacted systems was possible through a number of avenues.
“The protocol used by the [Computrace] Small Agent provides the basic feature of remote code execution,” the report said. “The protocol doesn't use any encryption or authorization with the remote server, which creates numerous opportunities for remote attacks in a hostile network environment.”
While Kaspersky hasn't seen any evidence of Computrace's weaknesses being used to carry out attacks, the researchers found that an attack on a local area network via address resolution protocol (ARP) poisoning (where a saboteur redirects all traffic from a computer running the software to their own control hub) was possible.
Another attack method could entail a domain name system (DNS) service attack “to trick the agent into connecting to a fake [command-and-control] server,” the report said.
Kaspersky Lab estimates that the vulnerable Computrace software may be activated on more than 2 million computers around the global, with the majority of computers located in the U.S. and Russia.
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