A massive hack of about 120,000 IP cameras in Korea exposed intimate footage sold overseas, revealing regulatory gaps in home surveillance devices and prompting government action over privacy risks ...
Four people have been arrested over the hacking of 120,000 home security cameras in South Korea and the sale of sexually explicit footage, as well as creating exploitative content of children, the ...
Threat actors will, truth be told, target anything and everything if it offers an opportunity to infiltrate a network or gain access to data. Perhaps the most dangerous of all are what the U.S.
South Korean police have arrested four people and charged them with hacking into more than 120,000 internet-connected video cameras in homes and businesses, then using the footage to produce and sell ...
Over on YouTube [Matt Brown] hacks a Chinese security camera recently banned by the US government. If you didn’t hear about this you can find out more over here: Major US online retailers remove ...
Worried that hackers got access to your Ring cameras on May 28? The “May 28 Ring camera hack” videos have been all over TikTok in recent days, but Ring asserts that the hacking fears are unfounded.
SEOUL — Four people have been charged in South Korea with hacking into tens of thousands of private video cameras in homes and businesses in search of sexually exploitative footage, authorities said ...
Hackers infiltrating smart TVs via Wi-Fi flaws and malware—discover signs and this TV security guide's home cybersecurity tips to lock them out. Pixabay, Alehandra13 Smart TVs have revolutionized home ...
Quick question: Would you consider “privacy” an important quality you value, in terms of the outside world having a bird’s eye view of what is going on in your home at any given time? Even quicker ...