The hack is the latest in a global trend targeting internet protocol cameras, often used in homes to keep an eye on children ...
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 Monday.
Four people have been arrested in South Korea for allegedly hacking more than 120,000 video cameras in homes and businesses ...
More than 120,000 home cameras in South Korea hacked to record ‘sexploitation’ footage - The suspects targeted cameras by ...
As if you need another reminder to not have internet-equipped cameras in your house, 120,000 were recently hacked in South ...
The Korean National Police have arrested four individuals suspected of hacking over 120,000 IP cameras across the country and ...
A concerned mother in Houston, Texas recently woke up to a horrifying discovery, after she learned that hackers have infiltrated her daughter's bedroom security surveillance cameras and broadcasted it ...
Ah, generic unbranded IP cameras. Safe, secure? Probably not. [Alex] has been hacking around with one of his very own, and he’s recently busted the thing wide open. Determining that the camera had a ...
WiFi cameras like many other devices these days come equipped with some sort of Linux subsystem. This makes the life of a tinkerer easier and you know what that means. [Tomas C] saw an opportunity to ...
What started as an analysis of a simple security flaw in a random wireless IP camera turned into seven vulnerabilities that affect over 1,250 camera models and expose nearly 200,000 cameras to hacking ...
The Korean National Police Agency said the suspects illegally manipulated and sold hundreds of videos to an overseas-based website.