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Think Twice About Buying Internet-connected Devices Off Ebay (qz.com)

If you're thinking about buying gadgets from auction sites such as Ebay, you will want to consider the potential risks. From a report: When you're buying from a third-party seller, it's a lot more difficult to tell where products have come from, whether you're getting exactly what you think you're getting, and if anything has been done to the product since it was manufactured. "It is possible for internet-connected devices to be tampered with and resold on the web," Leigh-Anne Galloway, lead cybersecurity resilience analyst at the cybersecurity firm Positive Technologies, told Quartz. "It's similar to buying a secondhand cellphone without it being restored to factory settings." In fact, buying a second hand gadget can potentially expose the user to some pretty extreme scenarios. "Cameras and IoT devices can contain spyware and malware, which can cause a plethora of problems for the user," Galloway added. "These devices could possibly listen to you, watch your every step, communicate with and attack other devices connected to the same local network, such as PCs, laptops, and TVs." Galloway said devices could also be used to perform botnet attacks -- where an unsecured internet-connected device is accessed by another computer and used along with other breached devices to take down websites or internet services, as what happened with the Mirai botnet attack in 2016.

2 of 77 comments (clear)

  1. I would argue it's not just Ebay by acoustix · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's all devices. Hell, most of them are designed to spy on the users. Do you trust anything coming from China?

    The sad fact is you've already agreed to be spied on when you agree to use almost any Internet connected device. There's really nothing that changes with this article.

    --
    "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
    1. Re:I would argue it's not just Ebay by Baron_Yam · · Score: 4, Informative

      >Do you trust anything coming from China?

      Yes. The Chinese have no interest in spying on the average consumer in the West. If I held a security-sensitive position in government, I'd be more concerned, but I don't so I'm not.

      And ultimately if I buy a domestic product I have to be concerned about domestic spying, which is more likely to directly affect me.