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Baby monitor hacked, spies on Texas child

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  • Baby monitor hacked, spies on Texas child

    Marc and Lauren Gilbert were terrified when they heard a strange voice calling out to their 2-year-old daughter Allyson, through a baby monitor in her room. The Texas family learned the hard way that almost anything connected to the Internet can get hacked.

    According to ABC News, Gilbert was washing dishes on the night of Aug. 10., when he heard noises coming from his daughter's room. He and his wife went in to investigate the situation, when they witnessed something more disturbing than they thought possible.

    A voice coming through a baby monitor, that was hooked up to the home's wireless Internet system, appeared to be operating on its own. CNN reports that the hacker used the device to curse and say sexually explicit things to the sleeping girl -- calling her by name and telling her to wake up.

    Gilbert says the hacker was able to take control of the camera and see his daughter's name on the wall. In a panic, he pulled the plug on the device. The girl was not disturbed by the hacker's calls because she was born deaf, having to depend on a cochlear implant to hear.

    Dave Chronister, who is the managing partner of Parameter Security, did not consult the Gilbert family, but works for an ethical hacking company that is familiar with these types of hacks. Chronister believes that the Gilberts were using a webcam, equipped with speakers, that was compromised.

    "In this case, what it sounds like is that they set this camera up, and someone cracked into the wireless network," Chronister told CBSNews.com.

    Chronister says that cracking into these webcams is similar to breaking into a website. If a password is not set, or is weak, the website that is used to manage the device can be compromised.

    Parents can protect their homes by setting a strong password. Chronister recommends using Wi-Fi Protected Access 2 (WPA2) to set up a password because it uses better encryption standards and is very difficult to crack, especially combined with a good password.

    Chronister says that these hacks are often times just kids pulling a prank, and warns of a phenomenon called "wardriving" -- where people drive around looking for homes with weak wireless security.

    "The thing to understand is that not all hackers have pointed at you as a target. You just happened to have a device that they know how to hack, so they hack it," Chronister says.

    To parents worried about their own home monitors being hacked, Chronister says: "Make sure you punch in a password and make sure it's long."

    Gilbert did not report the incident to the police, and says the family will probably ditch the device permanently.

    I wear a Fez. Fez-es are cool

  • #2
    This is news?

    Comment


    • #3
      To frost it is. The walls are closing in!!!

      Comment


      • #4
        Tomorrow:
        Hacked home security camera falsified owners shooting pet dog. Unedited footage shows cops did it during marijuana drug raid!
        sigpic

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        • #5
          stop with the bullshit video baby monitors and you wont need to worry

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          • #6
            Don't take you and your families security seriously, and you get creepy guys on your baby monitors.

            This is why you see so many people with a dot covering their laptops webcam.

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            • #7
              Wardriving is still news to some people? I thought that shit died out like, a decade ago.

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              • #8
                It's creepy, but not surprising
                Originally posted by MR EDD
                U defend him who use's racial slurs like hes drinking water.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by Ratt View Post
                  Wardriving is still news to some people? I thought that shit died out like, a decade ago.
                  Why would it die? With more people making purchases online, paying bills, accessing bank accounts... why would it have died a decade ago?

                  Now, the creepy-factor here... I would not attribute this to wardriving personally (the person mentioning wardriving had little information on this case). It seems to me this is some weirdo who likes this sort of thing. The more likely explanation is that this families setup was allowing one of the parents to view/listen to the webcam remotely. Maybe they opened up a port and the security was subpar. Maybe it was a common configuration and the creep is spending his nights searching for people using that hardware/config.

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                  • #10
                    It was on the foscam forums. Last I remember they were using some weak password and default ports, and old firmware.
                    "No free man shall ever be debarred the use of arms. The strongest reason for the people to retain the right to keep and bear arms is, as a last resort, to protect themselves against tyranny in government"

                    -- Thomas Jefferson, 1 Thomas Jefferson Papers, 334

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