Researchers revealed
ten major vulnerabilities in Internet-of-Things babycams from a variety of vendors ranging from spunky startups like Ibaby Labs to rock-ribbed (and deep-pocketed -- attention, class actioneers!) giants like Philips.
Many of these cameras have no easy, networked means of getting a firmware update, either, making their zeroday bugs into foreverday bugs. Some of these bugs were simple programmer error, but Philips, ah, Philips: they shipped an Internet-connected home spycam whose default root login was admin and /ADMIN/. Security.
As you can see, there were several new findings across a range of vendors, all operating in the same space. Here at Rapid7, we believe this is not unique to the video baby monitor industry in particular, but is indicative of a larger, systemic problem with IoT in general. We've put together a collection of IoT resources, including a whitepaper and a FAQ, covering these issues, which should fill you in on where we're at on this IoT security journey. Join us next week for a live webinar where Mark Stanislav and Tod Beardsley will discuss these issues further, or just use the #IotSec hashtag on Twitter to catch our attention with a question or comment.
#IoTsec Disclosure: 10 New Vulnerabilities for Several Video Baby Monitors [Tod Beardsley/Rapid 7]
1 comments:
Votre article est très intéressant. Cela donne une bonne idée sur le principe des caméra pour bébé.
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