| |   |  Good-Guy Hacker Finds Flaw that Could Have Drained $25B from an Indian Bank     Written by  	 Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai May 17, 2016				  					  											 Last year, during a cold, gray, late fall weekend in Sweden,  security researcher Sathya Prakash found out that with just a few lines  of code, he could steal money from any or all customers of one of  India’s biggest banks—all because of the bank’s faulty mobile app. 
  Luckily for the bank, Prakash is a friendly “white hat” hacker  who finds flaws to get them fixed. So, instead of taking advantage of a  series of critical flaws in the app, he told Motherboard he immediately  reached out to the bank to alert it of the issues and help fix them  instead of trying to steal any of the $25 billion that the bank has in  deposits. 
  “I could’ve done this with anybody’s account,” Prakash told  Motherboard in a phone call, adding that all he needed was the victim’s  account number. 
  “I was able to transfer money from any source account to any destination account.” Prakash  analyzed the bank’s app, and in just a few hours, he found several  bugs. One of the these allowed him to see customer records such as their  current account balance and deposits simply automating and guessing  customer IDs. That was just the beginning though, and when he kept  digging, he “hit a gold mine” finding a “huge bug:” anyone with the app  and an account in the bank could transfer money from anyone else’s  account.
  “I was able to transfer money from any source account to any destination account,” Prakash wrote  a blog post,  which he published on Monday, explaining that there were no checks  whatsoever to make sure that the transfer orders were really coming from  the account holder. 
  Prakash told me that he successfully tested this flaw using his parents’ accounts. 
  “Few of those accounts don't even have net banking or mobile  banking activated,” he wrote in the post. “And it all worked like a  charm.” 
  If he had been a criminal, Prakash told me, he could’ve easily  opened an account using a fake ID, then identified the accounts with the  most money, and transferred large sums to several accounts, including  his (in order to confuse investigators trying to figure out who was  behind this). At that point he could have withdrawn the money and ship  it in bitcoins. 
  “The flaws are so systemic and deep that only prayer will help these guys.“Saumil  Shah, a security researcher who is a consultant for three of the top  five Indian banks, reviewed Prakash’s findings and said he wasn’t  surprised. 
  “All I can say is that things are much worse than this chap has  discovered,” he told Motherboard in an email. “I shudder to even think.  [...] The flaws are so systemic and deep that only prayer will help  these guys. I'm surprised they're not attacked massively yet.”
  Prakash  emailed the bank, which he declined to name, on November 13, 2015. The  bank answered on November 25. The bank’s deputy general manager informed  him that the issues he pointed out had been fixed, and wished him “a  nice day,” without promising any kind of reward of bug bounty. 
  “It took them 12 days to respond to an email saying ‘Hey, your  several billion worth deposits are at risk,’” Prakash wrote. “[That] was  stunning.” 
  This incident shows once again that banks need to take the  security of their apps more seriously. At the end of last year, another  researcher  published a study  on the security of 40 banking apps. This researcher found that most had  significant, and fairly basic, security issues even after he had  already  sounded the alarm on the poor state of banking apps’ security in 2013. 
  motherboard.vice.com |  
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