Harbor Labs Chief Scientist Dr. Mike Rushanan served as the Principal Investigator for the paper The SBOM Transparency v. Exposure Dilemma: A Case Study on Adversarial Access to Public SBOMs in Healthcare. This is the second of his two papers to be presented at the upcoming HealthSec 2025 Conference this December in Honolulu, HI.
The FDA recommends that manufacturers publicly disclose a continuously updated Software Bill of Materials (SBOM) to support shared responsibility in cybersecurity risk management, vulnerability assessment, and mitigation. While this is a sound and proven security principle, caution should also be exercised in the public release of SBOMs without first evaluating the potential risks introduced by adversarial access.
To support this point, this paper examines a case study using a de-identified, FDA-compliant SBOM derived from a real-world medical device. Using a large language model (LLM), known vulnerabilities (CVEs) were extracted from the SBOM and an attack blueprint was automatically generated. The attack was then validated in a controlled containerized environment, demonstrating that even a minimally detailed SBOM can reduce adversary effort and streamline exploitation planning. The paper concludes with a recommendation that distinctions be made between the SBOM content provided to regulators, clinical end users, and the general public in order to limit unnecessary exposures.



