Hernández-Castro, Julio C.Sierra, José M.González-Tablas, Ana IsabelOrfila, Agustín2010-11-122010-11-122001-10IEEE 35th Annual International Carnahan Conference on Security Technology 2001. Proceedings. IEEE, 2001, p. 190-1960-7803-6636-0https://hdl.handle.net/10016/9541Proceeding of: IEEE 35th International Carnahan Conference on Security Technology, London , UK, 16 - 19 october 2001In the last years, many new intelligent full-featured peripherals that assist information systems have appeared. Those peripherals, such as printers, copiers, PDA organizers, Web cameras, etc. usually have a very friendly way of configuration and management (via http, ftp or telnet servers) and offer more networked services everyday. Their computation, memory and networking capabilities have also increased in the last years. Nowadays, many of them are comparable to workstations and run complete operating systems such as Linux or Solaris. All those factors imply that these devices could represent a real threat to the security of information systems. This problem is even worse because most of those peripherals have been considered inoffensive and not many administrators are aware of their security risks. The most representative example is printers, which have been traditionally considered totally harmless devices. At the present time, that idea is difficult to defend because many security incidents related with networked printers have arisen in the last years. System and security administrators have traditionally focused their efforts in fortifying servers and hosts only, but it seems that this view is not enough for assuring security nowadays.text/plainapplication/pdfeng© IEEEPrintersNetwork securityPrinters are dangerousconference paperInformática10.1109/.2001.962832open access190196IEEE 35th Annual International Carnahan Conference on Security Technology 2001