[Date Prev][Date Next] [Thread Prev][Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Re: write only storage.



On Tue, Sep 21, 2021 at 06:37:41PM +0100, Tim Woodall wrote:
A ransomware attack that exploits a zero day ssh vulnerability for
example wouldn't be a complete disaster - this is only home usage - but
it seems fairly trivial to create a 'worm' usb device using a pi. I
haven't tested yet but with a blu-ray burner attached too the pi could
write to disc once there's 25G written and then delete it.

I'm slightly surprised someone hasn't done something like this already.

Because it's not actually easy to use such a thing. What would the pi present itself as? A block device? Filesystems generally need to rewrite specific blocks in order to work. You need to be able to access specific objects. So maybe you expose the pi via CIFS or NFS or somesuch. Ok, but files are often not written as one atomic operation, especially on network filesystems. So you can't make the files completely immutable, you need to be able to append to them while they're being written. So what's your trigger condition to change from "appendable" to "immutable"?
There are solutions for this, mostly in the compliance space, but
they're generally pretty niche.


Reply to: