Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Major Financial PartnerMajor Financial Partner

Tech News

Researchers say a bug let them add fake pilots to rosters used for TSA checks

A collection of warning signs, bugs, and notifications emulating malware or a cyber attack. The images are placed in a connected web against a blue background.
Illustration by Carlo Cadenas / The Verge

A pair of security researchers say they discovered a vulnerability in login systems for records that the Transportation Security Administration (TSA) uses to verify airline crew members at airport security checkpoints. The bug let anyone with a “basic knowledge of SQL injection” add themselves to airline rosters, potentially letting them breeze through security and into the cockpit of a commercial airplane, researcher Ian Carroll wrote in a blog post in August.

Carroll and his partner, Sam Curry, apparently discovered the vulnerability while probing the third-party website of a vendor called FlyCASS that provides smaller airlines access to the TSA’s Known Crewmember (KCM) system and Cockpit Access Security System (CASS). They found that…

Continue reading…

You May Also Like

Business

After years of investing in self-checkout machines, some major retailers are starting to reverse course. Dollar General said it has eliminated self-checkout options at...

Editor's Pick

It was a very interesting week indeed. All-time high records continued to fall on a daily basis, but the complexion of the market most...

World News

Kamala D. Harris leaned into her background as a former prosecutor to attack Donald Trump in her first presidential bid in 2020 — a...

Editor's Pick

As a long-term stock trader, there’s one development in the stock market that takes me, and many others, to our collective knees. It’s a...