The Norwegian Consumer Council hired a security firm called Mnemonic to audit the security of four popular brands of kids' smart watches and found a ghastly array of security defects: the watches allow remote parties to seize control over them in order to monitor children's movements and see where they've gone, covertly listen in on them, and steal their personal information. The data the watches gather and transmit to offshore servers is copious and sent in the clear. The watches incorporate cameras and the photos children take are also easily plundered by hackers. (more…)
Saturday, 21 October 2017
Popular Posts
-
A British company named "<SCRIPT SRC=HTTPS://MJT.XSS.HTLTD" was ordered to change its name after regulators realized what was f...
-
Looking for something to illustrate a post about crunch-time in game development, I ran into this video depicting many forms of footwear (...
-
@samcahnruns Best purchase I ever made! 🦈🍎 #fyp #foryou ♬ original sound – Sam Cahn Instragram is the place where dropship derp...
-
My guest on the Cool Tools Show podcast this week is Simon Quellen Field. Simon is a chemist and former Google software engineer and is the...
-
No one will doubt your commitment to Sparkle Motion in Standard Rainbow's leggings . Their geometric patterns are inspired by the "...
-
We-Vibe agreed to pay up to $10,000 each to customers after tracking use of their "smart vibrators" without permission . The tota...
-
Saw this at a car show today. The guy drove it there... This concept inspired the economist Gordon Tullock to come up with the idea that...
-
https://vimeo.com/71952791 What happens if you allow a group of onlookers to do anything they want to you for six hours? Marina Abramovich ...
-
Davit Masia, creator of Pixatool ( previously ), has created another app for pixel artists—this time with the focus on movement. Pixel FX ...
-
These margarines are for people who really, really want to eat butter, but not enough to eat it. I refuse to believe that that is mainly ...
Powered by Blogger.