His claims are quickly debunked in the article, as the true reason is, obviously, protecting their IP and subscription model

  •  megopie   ( @megopie@beehaw.org ) 
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    “ See ink cartridges can be vectors for viruses because they have chips in them.”

    “Why does a container of ink have chips in it?”

    “To make sure you don’t use third party ink cartridges”

  •  mozz   ( @mozz@mbin.grits.dev ) 
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    Unsurprisingly, Lores’ claim comes from HP-backed research. The company’s bug bounty program tasked researchers from Bugcrowd with determining if it’s possible to use an ink cartridge as a cyberthreat. HP argued that ink cartridge microcontroller chips, which are used to communicate with the printer, could be an entryway for attacks.

    As detailed in a 2022 article from research firm Actionable Intelligence, a researcher in the program found a way to hack a printer via a third-party ink cartridge. The researcher was reportedly unable to perform the same hack with an HP cartridge.

    Shivaun Albright, HP’s chief technologist of print security, said at the time:

    “A researcher found a vulnerability over the serial interface between the cartridge and the printer. Essentially, they found a buffer overflow. That’s where you have got an interface that you may not have tested or validated well enough, and the hacker was able to overflow into memory beyond the bounds of that particular buffer. And that gives them the ability to inject code into the device.”

    This is a remarkable amount of effort and money to spend trying to demonstrate the “truth” of something which everyone involved was surely aware was bullshit from start to finish. I’m honestly at a loss to figure out what was the point, unless the point was “help me help I have too much money what am I gonna do with all this money.”

    (I looked it up, and the bug bounty program awarded “up to” $10,000. So maybe they just made the guy sign an NDA then gave him $100 and said thanks for helping us with our lying sucker, now get lost.)

    • I personally love how they gave ink cartridges the ability to execute arbitrary code. Not like there are ways for them to have a signed hash or something that could do the same amount of validation, but actual code. That’s HP’s fuckup, not ours.

      • It wasn’t quite that; there was a buffer overflow in the code that was talking to the ink cartridge. So a malicious ink cartridge could in fact take over your printer. Of course, a web page you visit could in fact take over your browser and that’s a much more realistic threat vector, and somehow we’ve survived all this time without limiting ourselves to HP-sponsored and security-assured web pages with a healthy cut of profit going to HP from every visit.

    • This is a remarkable amount of effort and money to spend trying to demonstrate the “truth” of something which everyone involved was surely aware was bullshit from start to finish.

      See the Return to Office mandates and basically anything and everything corporate-mandated. CEOs have shown they don’t actually give a flying fuck what research tells them, they’ll go with their “gut instinct” every time when their gut instinct always boils down to “Fuck you, I’ve got mine, nevermind that I got it by stealing it from you.”

      They’ll spend millions chasing thousands, they always do. The rich are only successful because of the wealth they can endlessly fall back on, the rest of us are completely fucked when we make the endless mistakes they make. It’s part of why they think they’re infallible, since their wealth insulates them from real consequences.

      • Yes. I suspect that when they say the printers are only vulnerable via third-party cartridges, they mean that obviously no genuine HP cartridge would contain malicious software, therefore any malicious cartridge is by definition third party, therefore the printers are only vulnerable via third-party cartridges.

  • This has real “Home Taping is Killing Music” vibes.


    But god damn do these corporate vultures really think that we owe them something.

    No, this is a financial transaction. I am buying a product from you, and once I have paid you, I owe you nothing more. Endless attempts to make your business model endlessly extractive from your customer base just shows you have shitty business management skills and don’t know how to grow your business outside of nickel-and-diming people to death.

  •  floofloof   ( @floofloof@lemmy.ca ) 
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    Shivaun Albright, HP’s chief technologist of print security, said at the time:

    “A researcher found a vulnerability over the serial interface between the cartridge and the printer. Essentially, they found a buffer overflow. That’s where you have got an interface that you may not have tested or validated well enough, and the hacker was able to overflow into memory beyond the bounds of that particular buffer. And that gives them the ability to inject code into the device.”

    Albright added that the malware “remained on the printer in memory” after the cartridge was removed.

    So HP had a vulnerability in their printer’s firmware that allowed arbitrary cartridge code to become executable, and they’re trying to spin this so it doesn’t sound like their printers are at fault. Still sounds like a them problem.

  • The mad rush to sell the sizzle, not the steak.

    Wouldn’t it be nice to have one company create a simple printer that just prints. It does not have a local webpage. It does not monitor your ink supplies. It does not phone home. It uses ink from bottles sold inexpensivly.

  •  flatbield   ( @furrowsofar@beehaw.org ) 
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    I guess it is HP think it is OK to brick your printer due to HP updates but using competing cartridges is just so dangerous. Typical.

    I never heard what happened to those bricked printers.

  • The only obvious solution to this new threat is to add certificates to their cartridge chips. And if you don’t use up your signed cartridges within the year that the cartridges had valid certificates, that’s really on you. Also, since we’re so worried about security on our ink cartridges, I’d like to be charged an extra $5 per cartridge if I’d like to register them with McAfee. /s

    Also, maybe HP should consider that putting words and images on dead trees is only being accelerated towards its grave by their greedy practices.

  • 🤖 I’m a bot that provides automatic summaries for articles:

    Click here to see the summary

    Last Thursday, HP CEO Enrique Lores addressed the company’s controversial practice of bricking printers when users load them with third-party ink.

    That frightening scenario could help explain why HP, which was hit this month with another lawsuit over its Dynamic Security system, insists on deploying it to printers.

    HP has issued firmware updates that block printers with such ink cartridges from printing, leading to the above lawsuit (PDF), which is seeking class-action certification.

    Still, because chips used in third-party ink cartridges are reprogrammable (their “code can be modified via a resetting tool right in the field,” according to Actionable Intelligence), they’re less secure, the company says.

    Further, there’s a sense from cybersecurity professionals that Ars spoke with that even if such a threat exists, it would take a high level of resources and skills, which are usually reserved for targeting high-profile victims.

    Realistically, the vast majority of individual consumers and businesses shouldn’t have serious concerns about ink cartridges being used to hack their machines.


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