From doorbell cameras to garage-door openers, cloud-based devices offer cybercriminals easy access to high-profile targets.
Those laser pointer lights could hack into your smart home voice assistant. University researchers say they were able to hack Alexa, Google Home, Siri and Facebook Portal by shining lasers at them.
WASHINGTON — Smart lightbulbs that change color and can turn on and off with an app or device, are useful, but it could be vulnerable to a hacker. Check Point security researchers recently revealed ...
Scopophobia is a fear of security cameras — the concern that behind their small, beady lenses, someone is watching you. If that concerns you, you aren’t alone; according to surveys, as many as one in ...
Last week, I examined how your smart home may be watching you, along with privacy considerations for smart devices in the age of AI robots. But I left readers with many unanswered questions ...
The smart device sector is seeing rapid change as major tech players roll out AI-powered upgrades while security researchers uncover fresh spyware threats. Google, Microsoft, and IKEA are introducing ...
News of more than 120,000 Korean home cameras being hacked recently can shake your confidence in connected devices. Stories like that make you picture cybercriminals breaking into homes with high-tech ...
A security hole in smart TVs which allows a hacker to take over devices using rogue DVB-T (Digital Video Broadcasting — Terrestrial) signals, get root access on the smart TV has worried a Swiss cyber ...