Specialists of Russian Railways will conduct an investigation after
the statement of the Habr user that he hacked the Wi-Fi network
during a trip on the Sapsan high-speed train and gained access to
the data of all its users in 20 minutes. According to the company,
the hacked network did not contain personal data, but only
entertainment content.
On Friday, November 15, user keklick1337 on the portal Habr.com was
returning from Saint-Peterburg, where he visited the ZeroNights
information security conference, to Moscow. The programmer became
bored, and he decided to check the reliability of the Wi-Fi and
easily gained access to the hidden data of Russian Railways. He
noted that " the same passwords and free security certificates are
used everywhere, and the data is stored in text documents."
"It is not difficult to access the data of the passengers of the
train and it takes at most 20 minutes", noted the author of the
post.
"The server of the information and entertainment system of Sapsan
trains does not store personal data of passengers. The multimedia
portal provides information and entertainment content: news of
Russian Railways, movies, books, music and other information, " —
said the representative of Russian Railways.
According to the spokesman, for authorization in the system, the
user must enter only the last four characters of the document,
which he used to buy a ticket, as well as the rail car and the seat
number. These data are not personal and in accordance with the
current legislation of the Russian Federation are stored on the
server for no more than one day.
"The infotainment system server is not connected to the internal
network of Russian Railways or other internal control services on
the train, it is designed exclusively for entertainment and
information topics and does not store any confidential customer
data," added the company.
The Russian Railways plans to conduct a technological investigation
on the fact of hacking the train system Sapsan.
Earlier,
E Hacking News reported that the personal data
of 703 thousand employees of Russian Railways, from the CEO to the
drivers, were publicly available.