Security researchers from the Chaos Computer Club (CCC) have exposed critical vulnerabilities in Hoymiles solar inverters that allow attackers to remotely control, manipulate, or destroy hundreds of thousands of solar installations across Europe. The Chinese manufacturer holds roughly 20 percent of the European microinverter market, making the security flaw a widespread threat to balcony power plants and small rooftop solar systems.
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During experimental tests, a modified handheld scanner located two dozen foreign inverters and their identification numbers within 20 minutes. In Augsburg, Hunz identified 42 hackable systems within just one hour. The radio signals can travel several hundred meters, making it feasible to mount attack equipment on drones for systematic scanning of residential areas.
Once attackers have the serial numbers, they can switch inverters on or off, alter power limits, and inject malware through an unprotected firmware update command. Tampering with sensitive network parameters or erasing bootloader memory could lead to fires, electrical accidents, or device destruction requiring physical repair.
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The CCC informed Hoymiles [which is headquartered in China] about the vulnerability in February but received no initial response. Only after the German Federal Office for Information Security contacted the Chinese authority CNCERT did Hoymiles react at the end of June. The company announced a security update for mid-October.
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I really don't think it's that easy. Nobody's going to fly a drone down the street broadcasting malware to these inverters. Still sounds like FUD to me. "Don't buy the reasonably priced solar, someone will burn your house down."
The issue is can not will. One does not need a drone to do it either. The radios have a "several hundred meter range". The device communicates without encryption, and accepts updates without encryption/authorization.
This applies to nearly all devices made by one company thats captured 1/5 of the market. It doesnt matter who makes it, this is unacceptable negligence.
This is an immently reasonable demand "The CCC is demanding mandatory minimum IT security standards for feed-in devices in the European Union. The organization specifically calls for banning devices that accept firmware updates via radio without cryptographic authentication."