
Suppose a criminal were using your nanny cam to keep an eye on your house. Or your refrigerator sent out spam e-mails on your behalf to people you donβt even know. Now imagine someone hacked into your toaster and got access to your entire network. As smart products proliferate with the Internet of Things, so do the risks of attack via this new connectivity. ISO standards can help make this emerging industry safer.
Indeed, spying on random strangers has never been easier. All it takes is a search engine like Shodan β the Google of the Internet of Things (IoT) β which, to highlight the risk of this technology, crawls the net taking pictures of unprotected devices. The inside of our homes, our pets, even our fridges, are only a click away. Some parents realized how vulnerable they were the hard way when the baby monitor they relied on for safety was hacked to yell obscenities at their sleeping children. Itβs not surprising that the number of complaints related to IoT technology has risen in the UK alone by 2Β 000Β % over the last three years.
…
https://www.iso.org/news/2016/09/Ref2113.html
Source: DRJ New feed





















