cross-posted from: https://scribe.disroot.org/post/10061950

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.

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.

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.

Archived

  • nanometer1625@thelemmy.club
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    1 hour ago

    PSA: If your router has a guest network feature, enable it, and put all of your IOT devices on it. Unlike the main network, guest networks are typically are configured such that each device on the guest network can only access the internet, and not other devices on the guest network, nor the router, itself.

    • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      12 minutes ago

      Or set up Home Assistant on a dedicated VLAN for all your IoT stuff. I know that’s a few extra steps that not every router will support, but it is a way to be more privacy focused (Home Assistant is entirely self-hosted) while still maintaining a lot of the IoT functionality.

  • Yggstyle@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Thats some impressive reporting from a news org utilizing an AI stock image that has no apparent ties to the content. To be fair I can’t think of any obvious choices either.

    I’ll just take a peek at their publishers:

    Damn. 404. (not that one)

    No worries - follow the money! Let’s see who your advertisers are…

    404? The plot thickens.

    About us! Surely they are going to describe their attention to detail, their quest for truth, and their refreshing lack of baises at this establishment…?

    1. Very well then. Keep your secrets.

    There can only be one explanation for this. Obviously.

    The dangerous hacker known as En Jin X. This would have never happened if everyone needed their ID online!

  • EastofEdson@lemmy.ca
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    21 hours ago

    Ok, we need to refer to them as something else. I thought we had a much bigger problem on our hands when I first read the title.

  • rmuk@feddit.uk
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    15 hours ago

    I’ve set up a few solar systems (and, I agree, it’s a pretty ambiguous name). Generally speaking, they’re devices that include an MPPT charger (which regulates the power coming from the solar panels), battery charger, and inverter (which produces mains AC), often with a bridge rectifier that also allows the system to accept input from the grid, and a second inverter to supply power back to the grid. It a lot of kit in a compact package, so it’s unsurprising that they come with apps to allow them to be monitored and configured and, sometimes, support for automation in, say, Home Assistant.

    And let me tell you: the majority of these things are fucking horrendous. I’ve lost count of the number of cheap Chinese units - with brands like LCERRZOPX and JRXYLNG, or provided whitebox so a fly-by-night European companies with a name like TotalCharge Voltacon Solutions can silkscreen their own logo on - which are guilty of every IoT sin imaginable: no local API or connectivity; plaintext communication to a data center in China; apps that force you to sign up and sends your credentials in clear text; apps that have not been updated since they were released in 2013 and crash constantly; no interface other than that fucking horrible app; and so on. This might seem like a minor thing, but if you’re depending on these things to run your entire house, you need access to that information, but I have to plead with people not to buy them because they’re €50 cheaper than the equivalent from a reputable brand. These devices are susceptible to anyone with a copy of Wireshark, let alone the manufacturers or Chinese government, and they’re just waiting to be exploited.

    Incidentally, if anyone is looking at buying something like this, I can’t recommend Victron highly enough. Aside from their kit being high quality, you can access every feature using Bluetooth either from their own app, or a number of other apps that support their published protocols including, of course, Home Assistant.

    • Jason2357@lemmy.ca
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      59 minutes ago

      Feels like solar tech is like trying to buy real medicine in 1890. Mostly snake oil or alcohol.

      • rmuk@feddit.uk
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        27 minutes ago

        Well, no. It all works and even the shittiest no-brand Chinese tat can reliably run a whole home with an EV or two. The systems I’ve been involved with have either paid for themselves within a couple of years, or are on track to. The problems here are nothing to do with solar and everything to do with poor quality IoT.

    • Derpgon@programming.dev
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      5 hours ago

      Definitely. My dad also got a “solar system” and when he showed me how it works I was like “Are you aware that China can basically disable and/or destroy it with a click of a button?”. He’s been very paranoid and been trying to disable any remote controls since then.

      • rmuk@feddit.uk
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        25 minutes ago

        The solution in my experience is to not bother with any kind of IP connection and try to find a serial port. If you can connect via serial odds are the protocol will have been reverse-engineered already. A cheap microcontroller can get it talking to Home Assistant and then you’ve got a well-maintained, self-hosted and open source way of controlling the system on your terms.

    • Jason2357@lemmy.ca
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      57 minutes ago

      I assume so yes. The first video we transmitted was Hitler, and the biggest radio signals were H-bombs.

    • Rhaedas@fedia.io
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      19 hours ago

      Already had one, why else do you think no one has contacted us yet? Wouldn’t you steer clear of this planet?

    • Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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      15 hours ago

      Specifically; this article is talking about the devices that convert DC power generated by solar panels into AC power that’s supplied to homes.

      Seems they’re mostly talking about home installations, but this could effect larger commercial setups too.

  • tardigrade@scribe.disroot.orgOP
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    20 hours ago

    Here is the article by CCC (in German)

    Edit:

    China Holds a Kill Switch to European Power Grids (May 2025)

    Despite years of debate about supply chain resilience, more than 70 percent of world’s solar inverters come from Chinese manufacturers. The three biggest players – Huawei, Sungrow, and Ginlong Solis – are all Chinese. Here lies the first paradox: Huawei has been banned from a large portion of Europe’s 5G networks due to national security concerns, yet its technology is welcomed into the power grid.

    • Jason2357@lemmy.ca
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      51 minutes ago

      They are complex systems that need monitoring and management. Of course, there are well established ways to do this with zero-cost software and no need for any of the janky stuff that is on all this IOT stuff except a deliberate desire to monetize equipment after the sale via enshitification.

    • DevDave@piefed.social
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      15 hours ago

      The inverters send status reports for tracking and auditing their production. unfortunately disconnecting some of these systems will cause them to go into standby mode after not being able to call home after two to three days.

    • db2@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      Why would a toaster or a toilet? Or an ordinary vacuum for that matter.

  • el3ctron@lemmy.ml
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    20 hours ago

    please destroy facebook, Palantir or Elon Musk and Peter Thiel shit, not solar panels.