Mac notebook batteries hacked
The chip that helps control your Mac notebook's battery could be the latest target for attackers. 
A  report in Forbes today details the findings of Accuvant security   researcher Charlie Miller, who claims to have found rather lackluster   security guarding the firmware that controls various notebook battery   functions and data stores. 
Culling through a battery firmware  update Apple released back in 2009, Miller pulled out two passwords  that  would grant access to that firmware, giving would-be attackers  the  ability to alter readings sent back to the OS and even add small   software programs that stay off the hard drive. Miller noted that he   outright permanently disabled seven notebook batteries during testing.
A  key part of the exploit, Miller told Forbes, was that the batteries use  the same passwords, making it an easy hack once you have the right  credentials. Potentially complicating that is the fact that Apple builds  its batteries into its notebook computers versus making them removable.  That change began in 2009 with the 17-inch MacBook Pro,  and trickled  down to the other models, resulting in considerable  battery life gains  at the expense of easy replacement. This means if a  battery were to  somehow be compromised, it's a trickier fix. At the  same time, it means  potential attackers need to gain control of that  system before they can  do anything, short of taking apart the machine. 
So far the hack  is a proof of concept, and has not yet been documented  in the wild.  Miller told Forbes he plans to detail the exploit as well  as show off a  fix at next month's Black Hat security conference in Las  Vegas.
An Apple representative declined to comment on Miller's findings.
 
 
 
 
 
