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Naked Security Naked Security

Mr. Robot eps2.8_h1dden-pr0cess.axx – the security review

We're looking at how Mr Robot's treatment of security stacked up in this week's episode!

Apologies that this review is a bit later than normal, I was away last week and had to catch up on the show a few days later than normal. We are back to the normal schedule this week.

As always, I want to thank our commenters on this series who offer up their feedback and valuable corrections! In a series as (purposely) disjointed and fast-paced as this one, I can miss or misinterpret details as well as anyone else, so your comments are always very welcome and appreciated.

Let’s dive on in to this intense episode. Spoilers ahoy!

WARNING: SPOILERS AHEAD – SCROLL DOWN TO READ ON

The Pringles Cantenna

Since all the tech in Elliot’s apartment was confiscated, he restocks on some much-needed gear to help him track the phone calls from “Tyrell” (or whoever it really is). We see him load up on some obvious gear, like burner phones, ethernet cables and…a can of Pringles potato chips?

He wasn’t after a midnight snack though. As he loads up Kali Linux on his new laptop (a required first step for any dyed-in-the-wool hacker), we see Elliot making a “high-powered antenna” with the Pringles can. His goal is to take a look at all the Wi-Fi networks in the neighborhood and find one that’s unsecured. It’s cheaper than buying his own router, and with his ‘cantenna’ he arguably has a wider-than-normal range of Wi-Fi networks to scan.

It was fun to see this hack in action and, while Elliot made it look a smidgen simpler than it really is, it’s not that hard to do. (The steps are here, if you’d like to give it a try yourself.)

The cantenna is a really neat bit of DIY ingenuity, but for me there’s a bigger question from this whole scene: Who the heck still has open, unsecured Wi-Fi in this day and age, especially in a city as population-dense as New York?

Unless the Wi-Fi owner feels they want to provide it as a public service, it seems like an invitation for lots of headaches. Someone left the door wide open for Elliot here, but of course for the sake of plot, we’re grateful.

Exigent Circumstances

Technology often only gets you so far. Even after the fantastic haul he brought in from Microcenter, the final step in tracking down the location of the mystery cell phone was a series of calls to phone carriers.

Yet again, we see social engineering come in to play as Elliot pretends to be a cop – complete with fake badge number – who’s just faxed an urgent “Exigent Circumstances” report to the cell carriers. He persuades them to send him GPS coordinates which conveniently pinpoint him to an exact location. (We have TV Magic to thank for that level of detail: Elliot says the ping is correct to a radius of about 12 meters, which seems conveniently precise.)

A quick search shows that finding these exigent circumstances forms is trivial, and they don’t ask for a whole lot of information. Many hacks aren’t necessarily technically impressive, but are a matter of knowing what pieces of information to put together, and this is a great example of one.

As a side note, I can’t help but wonder if this episode of Mr. Robot may end up propagating changes in the cell phone industry to make these requests a bit more difficult to fake.

Minor note

“We need to stop at Microcenter.” For those of us in the geek set in the United States, we knew why Elliot needed to make a stop here as soon as he mentioned it. If you’re not familiar with this chain, it’s the brick-and-mortar place to visit if you ever want to build your own computer or just want to do your techy shopping in person instead of online.

Mr. Robot is often praised for its attention to detail on the hacking side of things, and this cameo from a beloved DIY electronics chain was a nice touch.

 

Just two more episodes left in this season. We’ve seen increasing mentions of cryptocurrency in each episode, possibly we’ll see “Ecoin” take center stage in the finale? That’s just my guess, but the last few episodes have been quite a surprise.

How do you think this season will end? Let us know in the comments!


Image courtesy of USA Network.

3 Comments

Correct me if I’ve got this back-to-front, but if you’re in a metro area and looking for open Wi-Fi, isn’t a Pringle’s cantenna exactly the wrong way to go about it, because it’s directional? You might use a cantenna to try to connect to a specific far-away access point, but in any urban area I’ve visited lately, any recent mobile phone will do a more-than-satisfactory job of telling you what APs are out there in all directions, and quickly identify the open ones. (IIRC, it’s one line of Java code to request all currently visible APs on Android.) Or you could just go to any shopping mall or coffee shop. And then you wouldn’t have the giveaway of an improvised electromagnetic device in your hand, just a phone in your pocket. The Pringle’s can sounds like a piece of insecurity theater to me.

Reply

Well, the thing about the Cantenna is that it has a very narrow beam when transmitting. By reciprocity, it has a narrow beam on receiving, too, which means it gets signal from the object it’s aimed at without a lot of confounding signals from other devices. Great for range AND noisy environments.

But did you ever try to aim one? It’s like aiming a telescope at a specific star without any automation. You could spend hours and hours sweeping the area like a TV raster scan to find a strong, unlocked signal. That makes for a couple of pretty boring episodes.

Reply

If Elliot is anything like me he’s already aircracked most of the wifi networks in range of his old system which probably had a much better antenna, and now he is just connecting to a wifi network he already cracked the password on and is boosting the signal with the cantenna for better bandwidth.

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