Hewlett-Packard has warned owners of some of its laser printers to update their devices' firmware or risk having remote attackers
access previously-printed documents.
In an advisory published Wednesday, HP said that users of certain LaserJet, Color LaserJet and Digital Sender models are affected,
and urged them to immediately download and install firmware upgrades.
The devices include 10 different LaserJet models -- ranging from the 2410 to the 9050 -- two Color LaserJet models and the
9200C Digital Sender, a sheet-fed document scanner.
According to San Antonio, Texas-based Digital Defense, Inc., the security company that reported the problem to HP last October,
attackers can exploit a bug in the printers' Web-based control interface to "read arbitrary system configuration files, cached
documents, etc."
Exploiting the vulnerability, the Digital Defense researchers said, is "trivial" with common Web server "directory traversal"
tactics. A directory transversal attack is an HTTP-based exploit that lets attackers access restricted directories, and execute
commands outside of the server's root directory.
Adrien de Beaupre, an analyst with the SANS Institute 's Internet Storm Center (ISC), added his voice to the call for patching printers. "The impact might not seem severe, as
in the attacker can view the printer configuration; however, viewing cached versions of printed documents can be," said de
Beaupre in an alert on the ISC site Friday.
Other than patching, the only other defensive measure available is to disable access to the printers' online control interface,
de Beaupre added.
HP listed the affected printers in a security bulletin , which also included instructions on how to download the firmware update.
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