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Expression0 +1
Transform Your service Through Beacon Signal
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+19 +1
How a wireless keyboard lets hackers take full control of connected computers
Keystrokes can be recorded, replayed and injected into Fujitsu wireless model.
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+21 +1
Potential impact of two IoT security and privacy laws on tech industry
Two new laws in California will create rules for IoT device makers and businesses holding consumer information. Here’s what that means for the rest of us when they go into effect in 2020.
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+13 +1
Healing the body electric
In the next 5 to 10 years, a new generation of small networked sensors will provide doctors with up-to-the-moment insight into patients’ health. Here's a few of the things underway.
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+12 +1
Top 10 IoT and edge computing conferences to attend in 2019
Need to come up to speed on the Internet of Things and edge computing but not sure where to put your conference dollars? Here’s a comprehensive guide to 10 interesting IoT events.
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+9 +1
UK seeks to secure smart home gadgets
Makers of smart home devices are to be encouraged to make their gadgets secure against hack attacks. The UK has published a voluntary code of practice for manufacturers that shows how they can proof their creations against common attacks. It aims to stop gadgets being hijacked and used to mount cyber-attacks - and stamp out designs that let cyber-thieves steal data. Two companies, HP and Hive Centrica, have already agreed to follow the code.
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+23 +1
A Casino Was Hacked Thanks To The Internet Of Broken Things & A Fish Tank Thermometer
For years we've documented how the internet of broken things industry and evangelists have contributed to a global privacy and security shitshow... By Karl Bode. (Apr. 16, 2018)
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+8 +1
IoT standards: A starting point, but not the finishing line
The latest Gartner Hype Cycle for IoT Standards and Protocols profiles 30 standards, 15 of which have been marked to deliver “high business benefit.” Here’s help to make sense of them.
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+6 +1
Integrated emergency response in a not-quite-connected world
Despite the complex environment, advanced technology is changing the way cities respond to calls for help. Here are some of the most visible ways that's happening.
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+22 +1
Mirai IoT Botnet Co-Authors Plead Guilty
The U.S. Justice Department on Tuesday unsealed the guilty pleas of two men first identified in January 2017 by KrebsOnSecurity as the likely co-authors of Mirai, a malware strain that remotely enslaves so-called “Internet of Things” devices such as security cameras, routers, and digital video recorders for use in large scale attacks designed to knock Web sites and entire networks offline (including multiple major attacks against this site).
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+7 +1
When good IoT devices go bad
As smart sensors and other IoT devices proliferate throughout enterprises and industries, the quality of data collected is crucial. However, they are often at the mercy of their environment, human error, and hackers.
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+4 +1
IoT low-power WAN expected to improve quality of life in India's cities
Experts discuss potential impact and improvement of low-power edge computing benefits on rapidly modernizing cities.
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+37 +1
Boy, 11, hacks cyber-security audience to give lesson on 'weaponisation' of toys
An 11-year-old “cyber ninja” has stunned an audience of security experts by hacking into their Bluetooth devices to manipulate a robotic teddy bear, showing in the process how interconnected smart toys “can be weaponised”. Reuben Paul, who is in sixth grade at school in Austin, Texas, and his teddy bear Bob wowed hundreds at a cyber-security conference in the Netherlands.
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+12 +1
If Your Saltshaker Doesn’t Have Bluetooth, Why Do You Even Use Salt?
Salt. Good old sodium chloride, baby. We need it to stay alive. A long time ago, it was very valuable. There was a pretty good book written about it. A guy went viral for sprinkling it while being handsome. But what about when you’re just using it at home? You might use a saltshaker. But that shaker probably doesn’t play music. Or change colors. Or have Bluetooth. Your saltshaker is trash, frankly.
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+6 +1
Smart workplaces are more productive and efficient
Almost three-quarters of enterprise organizations have introduced IoT devices and sensors into the workplace, according to a recent survey.
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+12 +1
How to secure the network's intelligent edge in the Internet of Things
Much of the IoT's value resides at the network's edge, where organizations collect some of their most sensitive information. Traditional security measures can't always protect this data. Experts weigh in on how to prevent physical access to the network through IoT devices and safeguard the data collected and processed at the edge.
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+21 +1
Death of the internet: GIF at 11
Today, thanks to the insecure Internet of Things, we're reaching a point where the internet really could be crashed. But we can stop it if we try.
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+34 +1
Go Ahead, Hackers. Break My Heart
MY LIFE DEPENDS on the functioning of a medical device: a pacemaker that generates each and every beat of my heart. I know how it feels to have my body controlled by a machine that is not working correctly, and this is why I encourage fellow security researchers to delve into these medical devices and find ways to make them more secure. Four years ago, I woke up lying on the floor, but I had no idea how I’d gotten there or for how long I’d been out.
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+43 +1
Coming soon to your smart TV: The next wave of cybercrime
Smart TVs are opening a new window of attack for cybercriminals, as the security defenses of the devices often lag far behind those of smartphones and desktop computers. Running mobile operating systems such as Android, smart TVs present a soft target due to how to manufacturers are emphasizing convenience for users over security, a trade-off that could have severe consequences.
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+28 +1
Inside Canonical: the creators of Ubuntu have big plans for the future
There’s more to Canonical than a new version of Ubuntu every six months
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