Air-fi Rete locale Giacomo Lanzi

Air-Fi: attacking computers that are disconnected and without network hardware is possible

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

To keep secret information out of reach of attackers, organizations place it on devices that are not connected to any network. This is to avoid any possibility of communication with the Internet. These machines are called air-gapped . As safe as it may seem, infecting such a machine or network segment isn’t actually that difficult. Extracting the information obtained is much more difficult, but it was still possible with the Air-Fi technique .

To study an exploit of this scenario, all kinds of clever methods come into play, and Mordechai Guri, a researcher at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev (Israel), specializes in finding them. Dr. Guri is not the only one, of course, but in recent years, he has been involved in the discovery of a few dozen of these methods. Un new study describes how to extract data from an isolated computer, this time using Wi-Fi technology (hence the name Air-Fi ).

Air-fi Local network

How the Air-Fi method works

The beauty of Air-Fi is that it works even if the target computer has no Wi-Fi hardware. It relies on malware already installed on the device that can use the bus of DDR SDRAM memory to generate electromagnetic radiation at a frequency of 2.4 GHz . Malware can encode necessary data in variations of this radiation, and any device with a Wi-Fi receiver, including another compromised device, can collect and intercept the generated signals. This other device could be a regular smartphone or even a smart light bulb.

The Air-Fi method is particularly unpleasant from a cybersecurity point of view. It does not require administrator rights on the isolated computer; a normal user account can do the job. Also, using a virtual machine doesn’t provide any protection; VMs have access to memory modules.

Transmission range and speed

The researchers transmitted data without noteworthy distortion at a distance of up to 2-3 meters (in one case, up to 8 meters) and a speed of up to 100 bits per second , depending on the hardware of the infected computer and the type of receiver. Like most similar methods, it’s not very fast. Transferring a 20MB file would take 466 hours, for example. That said, the 1,300-byte “Jingle Bells” text could be transferred in 90 seconds. In this light, stealing a username and password with this technique seems entirely realistic.

Air-Fi RAM

How an attack could work

Infecting a air-gapped system with malware is not difficult. An attacker can easily do this by contaminating a USB drive, using social engineering or by tricking staff. Once done, the attacker would then have to infect a nearby WiFi-capable device to receive the leaked data. For this, the attacker can infect nearby desktops, laptops or even smartphones of personnel operating the target system with air-gapped .

To prevent this type of physical attack on the company, you may want to consider our service of physical test your company’s security !

After a successful infection, the malware steals data from the air-gapped system, leaking it into the air as Wi-Fi for the receiving device. As the researchers explained:

As part of the exfiltration phase, the attacker could collect data from compromised computers. The data can be documents, key records, credentials, encryption keys, etc. Once the data is collected, the malware starts the secret Air-Fi channel . It encodes the data and transmits it in the air (in the 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi band) using the electromagnetic emissions generated by the DDR SDRAM buses.

The following video shows a possible attack scenario.

The extraordinary absence of wi-fi hardware

As we have seen, the Air-Fi attack does not require specific Wi-Fi hardware to be installed on the target machines. How is it possible?

It is shown that the attack uses DDR SDRAM memory buses to generate electromagnetic emissions in the frequency band typical of the Wi-Fi protocol , ie 2.4 GHz Furthermore, it is also possible to encode data in binary code without specific privileges . Using a virtual machine doesn’t help, as they typically have access to hardware RAM anyway.

Communication between CPU and RAM modules takes place via a bus synchronized with the system clock . This generates electromagnetic radiation which will have a frequency related to the clock frequency. In the case of the DDR4 memory blocks it is around 2.4 GHz.

If the frequency of the modules is not the correct value, it is still possible to overclock or downclock the memory speed by adjusting it to the Wi-Fi frequency of 2.4 GHz.

In short, a machine that uses RAM blocks could still find a way to use them for data transmission. Of course, it all starts with a first compromise that installed malware on the machine.

How to defend yourself from Air-Fi

The use of Air-Fi involves electromagnetic emissions. It is possible to counter the strategy by using the following measures:

  • Do not allow Wi-Fi enabled devices to approach air-gapped systems for any reason
  • Monitor isolated systems for suspicious processes
  • Shielding the computer in a Faraday cage
  • Using SOCaaS to monitor networked machines
  • Control operations and visits to the company in order to eliminate the possibility of infection via USB stick

Like all similar methods, Air-Fi is too slow and difficult for common cybercriminals to use for everyday attacks. However, if your company is using air-gapped machines for data storage, it is certainly better to take cover, given the recent data hunger of cyber crime < / em>.

We recommend that you consider adopting a SOCaaS to prevent the use of malware, run regular procedures for verifying corporate security, both virtual ( Vulnerability Assessment & amp; Penetration Test ) and physical, as previously suggested, through our dedicated test service .

Contact us to find out how we can help you and how our services can secure your company data, we will be happy to answer any questions.

Useful links:

Share


RSS

More Articles…

Categories …

Tags

RSS Unknown Feed

RSS Full Disclosure

  • Multi-Protocol Traceroute August 19, 2025
    Posted by Usman Saeed via Fulldisclosure on Aug 18#!/usr/bin/env python3 """ Adaptive Multi-Protocol Traceroute Author: Usman Saeed email: u () defzero net Website: www.defzero.net Description: This script is a TTL-based path mapper that reveals routes even when classic traceroute is filtered. The idea was that it would run in passes: first a conventional trace (ICMP […]
  • SEC Consult SA-20250728-0 :: Stored Cross-Site-Scripting in Optimizely Episerver CMS August 19, 2025
    Posted by SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab via Fulldisclosure on Aug 18Confidentiality class: Internal & Partner SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab Security Advisory < publishing date 20250728-0 > ======================================================================= title: Multiple Stored Cross-Site Scripting Vulnerabilities product: Optimizely Episerver Content Management System (EPiServer.CMS.Core) vulnerable version: Version 11.X:
  • SEC Consult SA-20250807-0 :: Race Condition in Shopware Voucher Submission August 19, 2025
    Posted by SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab via Fulldisclosure on Aug 18Confidentiality class: Internal & Partner SEC Consult Vulnerability Lab Security Advisory < publishing date 20250807-0 > ======================================================================= title: Race Condition in Shopware Voucher Submission product: Shopware 6 vulnerable version: v6.6.10.4 fixed version: No fixed version available yet CVE number: CVE-2025-7954 impact: medium...
  • Insufficient Resource Allocation Limits in nopCommerce v4.10 and v4.80.3 Excel Import Functionality August 19, 2025
    Posted by Ron E on Aug 18nopCommerce is vulnerable to Insufficient Resource Allocation Limits when handling large Excel file imports. Although the application provides a warning message recommending that users avoid importing more than 500–1,000 records at once due to memory constraints, the system does not enforce hard limits on file size, record count, or […]
  • CSV Injection in nopcommerce v4.10 and 4.80.3 August 19, 2025
    Posted by Ron E on Aug 18nopCommerce versions v4.10 and v4.80.3 are vulnerable to *C*SV Injection (Formula Injection) when exporting data to CSV. The application does not properly sanitize user-supplied input before including it in CSV export files. An attacker can inject malicious spreadsheet formulas into fields that will later be exported (for example, order […]
  • Insufficient Session Cookie Invalidation in nopCommerce v4.10 and 4.80.3 August 19, 2025
    Posted by Ron E on Aug 18nopCommerce v4.10 and 4.80.3 is vulnerable to Insufficient Invalidation of Session Cookies. The application does not properly invalidate or expire authentication cookies after logout or session termination. An attacker who obtains a valid session cookie (e.g., via network interception, XSS, or system compromise) can continue to use the cookie […]
  • Session Fixation Vulnerability in iDempiere WebUI v 12.0.0.202508171158 August 19, 2025
    Posted by Ron E on Aug 18The application does not issue a new session identifier (JSESSIONID) after successful authentication. An attacker who can set or predict a victim’s session ID prior to login may hijack the victim’s authenticated session once they log in, resulting in full account takeover. POST /webui HTTP/2 Host: Cookie: JSESSIONID=node01***.node0;
  • CSV Injection in iDempiere WebUI 12.0.0.202508171158 August 19, 2025
    Posted by Ron E on Aug 18A CSV Injection vulnerability exists in iDempiere WebUI v12.0.0.202508171158. The application fails to properly sanitize user-supplied input before including it in exported CSV files. An authenticated attacker can inject malicious spreadsheet formulas (e.g., =cmd|&apos;/C notepad&apos;!A1) into fields that are later exported. When the CSV is opened in spreadsheet software […]
  • liblcf v0.8.1 liblcf/lcf2xml: Untrusted LCF data triggers uncaught std::length_error via negative vector resize (DoS) August 19, 2025
    Posted by Ron E on Aug 18lcf2xml (part of liblcf) aborts when parsing specially crafted RPG Maker 2000/2003 files that supply a negative element count for vectors of structured records. The generic reader: template void Struct::ReadLcf(std::vector& vec, LcfReader& stream) { int count = stream.ReadInt(); vec.resize(count); // huge size_t -> throws length_error for (int i = […]
  • liblcf v0.8.1 Integer Overflow in liblcf `ReadInt()` Leads to Out-of-Bounds Reads and Denial of Service August 19, 2025
    Posted by Ron E on Aug 18A crafted RPG Maker save file (`.lsd`) can trigger an integer overflow in liblcf’s lcfstrings compressed integer decoding logic (`LcfReader::ReadInt()`), resulting in an unbounded shift and accumulation loop. The overflowed value is later used in buffer size allocations and structure parsing, causing large memory access requests and parsing errors. […]

Customers

Newsletter

{subscription_form_1}