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Security for the 'Internet of Things' (Video)

What happens when your oven is on the Internet? A malicious hacker might be able to set it to broil while you're on vacation, and get it so hot that it could start a fire. Or a prankster might set your alarm to wake you up at 3 a.m. - and what if someone gets access to the wireless security camera over your front door and uses it to gain access to the rest of your home network, and from there to your bank account? Not good. With the 'Internet of Things' you will have many devices to secure, not just a couple of computers and handheld devices. Timothy Lord met Mark Stanislav of Duo Security at BSides Austin 2014, which is where this interview took place.(Here's an alternate link to the video.)

2 of 106 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Why would my oven need to be online? by Russ1642 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Your toaster needs to be online so it knows the time. It needs to know when its warranty expires so it can break down right on schedule.

  2. Re:iOS vs Android in the car by Sloppy · · Score: 3, Funny

    If someone changing a map can "drive you into a lake" then YOU have already been hacked, and it doesn't matter how [in]secure your car is. You (not one of your computers) have been owned. You don't exist anymore, because your body (which had previously been a person) has become an unconscious fully-trusting map-executing machine.

    That's cause for concern, but I wouldn't worry about their computers' security problems.

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