Originally published January 9, 2008 at 12:00 AM | Page modified January 9, 2008 at 6:32 PM
Boeing must prove 787 computer network safe from hackers
Before Boeing's new 787 jetliner gets the green light to fly passengers, the jet maker will have to prove the plane's computer network can't...
The Associated Press
Before Boeing's new 787 jetliner gets the green light to fly passengers, the jet maker will have to prove the plane's computer network can't be hacked.
Boeing has designed the 787 to allow airlines to offer passengers more in-flight entertainment and Internet options than it has with previous planes. Those new features and other aspects of 787's computer network go beyond the scope of existing regulations, so the Federal Aviation Administration is requiring Boeing to show the new technology won't pose a safety threat.
In a "special condition" the FAA has ordered Boeing to satisfy, the agency notes that the 787 "allows new kinds of passenger connectivity to previously isolated data networks connected to systems that perform functions required for the safe operation of the airplane.
"Because of this new passenger connectivity, the proposed data network design and integration may result in security vulnerabilities from intentional or unintentional corruption of data and systems critical to the safety and maintenance of the airplane."
Boeing spokeswoman Lori Gunter said the 787's aviation electronics "are not connected in any way to the Internet. Also, there is not any place were the passenger interface to the Internet shares hardware" with the plane's aviation electronics.
"There are multiple layers of hardware and software ... that ensures data cannot pass from the passenger entrainment network to the other more secure networks on the airplane," Gunter said.
Special conditions are a normal part of the regulatory process aircraft makers go through to get their planes certified for flight. The FAA issues them any time new designs introduce safety concerns that aren't fully addressed in existing regulations.
Gunter declined to specify exactly how and to what degree the plane's computer networks are physically separated. "One of the things you do to ensure security is not talk about the protections in any great detail," she said.
Boeing has already completed all lab tests the FAA has ordered for computer security, Gunter said. Final approval will come after Boeing runs another set of tests during flight testing, which is scheduled to begin in March.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
UPDATE - 09:27 AM
Service sector shrinks less than expected in June
Tech execs double as scourges and sages at Allen & Co.'s media summit
UPDATE - 10:15 AM
Stocks slide on conflicting signs about economy
UPDATE - 10:49 AM
Bankruptcy judge OKs GM sale plan, appeal looms

2009 fireworks time lapse
With strict parking rules enforced at this year's July 4th celebration on Wallingford Ave North, less cars and more spectators filled the streets.
Entertainment | Top Video | World | Offbeat Video | Sci-Tech
shopping

events for Monday, Jul. 6th
- IKEA Summer Sale
- Posh on Main Semiannual Sale
- Karan Dannenberg Clothier Progressive...
- Pink Ginger First Anniversary Sale
editors' picks
More shopping guides- Landmark Smith Tower mostly vacant
- Seattle may allow homeowners to build backyard cottages
- Relative: Police say woman with McNair bought gun
- Property taxes: Appeals shoot up in King, Snohomish Counties
- Palin links resignation to 'higher calling' and blasts media in Facebook posting
- Former NFL MVP McNair killed
- Hard times for tourist towns means good deals for travelers
- Tukwila residents rally against light-rail noise
- Confessions of an Idol Addict | "American Idols" on tour: Live coverage from opening date
- Quincy Jones remembers "the biggest entertainer on the planet": Michael Jackson
- Seattle Mariners at Boston Red Sox: 07/05 game thread
248 - Palin links resignation to 'higher calling' and blasts media in Facebook posting
193 - Hatred for the NBA runs deep, but don't take it out on the players
139 - Tukwila residents rally against light-rail noise
132 - Tent City on campus: UW stalls decision
111 - Property taxes: Appeals shoot up is King, Snohomish Counties
110 - Seattle may allow homeowners to build backyard cottages
65 - What Mariners learned on this road trip
57 - Mariners did their part, now they need help
49 - FBI denounces rumors: Palin not investigated
46
- Property taxes: Appeals shoot up in King, Snohomish Counties
- Seattle may allow homeowners to build backyard cottages
- Hard times for tourist towns means good deals for travelers
- Landmark Smith Tower mostly vacant
- Researchers stunned by inmates' success raising endangered frogs
- Plasma and LCD beware; OLED screens ready to go mainstream
- 250 gather in field near Twisp for fairy congress
- The People's Pharmacy | Estrogen mimicker found in sunscreen
- New laws help tenants evicted due to foreclosure
- Tent City on campus: UW stalls decision
