A massive hack of about 120,000 IP cameras in Korea exposed intimate footage sold overseas, revealing regulatory gaps in home surveillance devices and prompting government action over privacy risks ...
These hacked cameras were placed in private rooms, karaoke rooms, a Pilates studio and a clinic. More than 1,20,000 surveillance cameras placed in homes and businesses have been hacked in South Korea.
The government will strengthen security measures at every stage—manufacturing, distribution, and use—to prevent recurring IP camera hacking and video leaks. An IP camera is a camera connected to wired ...
South Korean police have arrested four individuals for hacking over 120,000 internet cameras, stealing footage for illegal sexual content. Suspects sold videos online, with some earning thousands in ...
Four people have been arrested in connection with the hacking of more than 120,000 internet protocol (IP) surveillance cameras installed in homes and businesses, which led to the large-scale ...
Seoul — South Korean authorities have arrested four individuals accused of hacking over 120,000 video cameras in homes and businesses and using the footage to create sexually exploitative content for ...
Hacking — at least the kind where you’re breaking into stuff — is very much a learn-by-doing skill. There’s simply no substitute for getting your hands dirty and just trying something. But that ...
Quick question: Would you consider “privacy” an important quality you value, in terms of the outside world having a bird’s eye view of what is going on in your home at any given time? Even quicker ...
Ahmedabad: Almost 10 months after the Rajkot privacy scandal, wherein hundreds of clips of hacked CCTV footage from a gynaecology hospital went viral, Gujarat remains exposed. According to a report by ...