Beware the Haunted Cordless keyboard
dr. greenthumb writes "The norwegian newspaper Aftenposten reports about an incident where a computer suddenly seemed to develop a life of its own. A game which the user could not remember using that day suddenly appeared on the screen. When he went over to shut it off the screen displayed a message asking him if he "really wanted to delete this file?"
His computer was receiving keystrokes from another computer (with the same type of wireless keyboard) 150 metres away!
Check out the full story and a follow-up, where experts warns against using wireless keyboards." /me plans to destroy Hemos' sanity...
So whatever happened to infrared keyboards?
Clear that "listening in" problem right up.
The attitude companies have towards security is appalling. Wireless keyboards have to use strong cryptography or credit card numbers and personal information are being broadcast across the neighborhood. 256 channels isn't going to fix it.
This must violate FCC requirements - you know that text on the bottom of your keyboard and mouse.
Why is Triangle Man so MEAN?
I know there are security and other settings that when properly configured will help prevent these mistakes, but just look at the number of unsecured business wireless networks out there that don't even have WEP turned on. Its going to be nasty.
Why should I pay $20 more for a wireless keyboard when it never leaves my desk? I understand it on a mouse, since mice move around, but keyboards don't. I don't understand why some people pay extra money for something that requires batteries, is less reliable, costs more, and comes with security risks, when the wired alternative works just fine.
- Being the nice guy I am, I made up an instruction sheet detailing how to fix the problem, and printed it to whatever shared printers existed.
If there's an asshole at the other end, say a technically challenged CEO of some company, by doing that you're likely to be sued for breaching their systems.
Yeah, you're doing the right thing, but assholes just happen.
There could be a number of legitimate ways this happened:
1. The encryption feature was there all along, but they didn't get around to supporting it in the software until now. This often happens in commercial hardware products, when you hit a deadline and the drivers just aren't ready. Although 3 years does seem a bit excessive.
2. The driver actually downloads code to the controller in the keyboard, thereby "upgrading" it to include encryption.
3. The hardware supported it all along, but they were having trouble getting their government paperwork to ship a product with encryption. So they just yanked the feature out of the driver until such time as the paperwork is done. Now its done so they are shipping the drivers.