A massive hack of about 120,000 IP cameras in Korea exposed intimate footage sold overseas, revealing regulatory gaps in home ...
Smart home hacking fears overblown? Expert reveals real cybersecurity risks and simple protection tips to keep your connected ...
The hack is the latest in a global trend targeting internet protocol cameras, often used in homes to keep an eye on children and pets, as well as in businesses, hospitals and saunas.
Four people have been arrested in South Korea for allegedly hacking more than 120,000 video cameras in homes and businesses and using the footage to make sexually exploitative materials for an ...
Four independent suspects have been arrested in South Korea for hacking private cameras in homes, karaoke rooms, a Pilates studio, and a gynecologist’s clinic to produce sexually exploitative material ...
According to reporting on the statute, intentional plate obstruction in Florida is now a second-degree misdemeanor, with ...
The authorities arrested four people this week in the latest turn in the country’s effort to stop exploitative recordings.
i-PRO IT/Cyber Director Will Knehr discusses how threat actors can hack cameras to breach networks, why AI is becoming another attack vector, and what “ethical hacking” can do to harden your security ...
Smart home hacking exists, but it's probably not the threat you think it is. Here are the facts, practices to keep you safe and more.
Private cameras are supposed to make people feel safer. The small Internet-connected devices can be mounted outside your home to deter or record potential criminals, or inside to keep an eye on pets ...
South Korean police have arrested four people accused of hacking more than 120,000 internet-connected video cameras in homes and businesses and using the footage to produce sexually exploitative ...