802.bah – Beware the SiriSheep Attack!
On the heels of a French group reverse-engineering the Siri protocol by intercepting requests to the Internet-based server that Apple sends Siri requests to, Pete Lamonica, a first-time Ruby developer has produced another innovative hack.
Lamonica has created an extensible proxy server to enable not only interception of Siri requests, but provide connectivity/interfacing to other devices, such as his Wifi-enabled thermostat.
Check it out here:
What I think might be an interesting is if, in the future, we see Siri modified/deployed in the same way as Microsoft’s Kinect is today used to control all sorts of originally-unintended devices and software.
Can you imagine if $evil_person deployed (via Proxy) the Siri version of the once famed Starbucks pwnership tool, FireSheep? SiriSheep. I call it…
Your house, your car, your stock trades, emails, etc…all Siri-enabled. All Siri-pwned.
I have to go spend some time with the original code — it’s unclear to me if the commands to Siri are sent via SSL and if they are, how gracefully (or ungracefully) errors are thrown/dealt with should one MITM the connection. It seems like it doesn’t give a crap…
Thanks to @JDeLuccia, here’s the github link to the original code.
/Hoff
Related articles
- Siri proxy adds tons of functionality, doesn’t require a jailbreak (hackaday.com)
- SiriProxy Adds Custom Commands to Siri to Control Anything on Your Home Network [Video] (lifehacker.com)
- Coder creates Siri proxy (go.theregister.com)
- Siri reverse-engineered and its inner workings exposed (intomobile.com)
- Siri Argument (laughingsquid.com)
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