There was the instance of LG being outed for collecting the names of images/movies/etc read from USB media being reported back to a central server but not in the same Orwellian sense that webcams forever monitoring video streams and archiving conversations.
I haven't read of any exploits of smart TVs being used to monitor subject. Feasible? Sure. Reality? Probably not.
I haven't read of anything specific to smart TVs either. But here's my concern: this can (and is) happening with webcam-enabled, network-connected computers. A smart TV is essentially just a computer that's _always_ network-connected and, as evidenced by someone walking into a room and saying "TV on," always on as well.
Feasible? Very. Reality? We don't hear about every detected exploit ... Smart TVs are new enough that, even if this _is_ happening today, we won't hear about it in the media or online for quite some time.
Not FUD. It happens: http://www.macrumors.com/2013/12/18/software-allows-hackers-.... I've used similar approaches to check on my home office from remote locations. Given, I have the correct credentials to get in to my home network, but I'm using off-the-shelf tech here so there's a high potential for hidden zero-days to exist.
In college I actually discovered (6 months after it started) that a group of students had hacked my PC and were using it to host a private message board. Had no idea until someone from the school contacted me and told me to shut down my "unapproved social network" ...
What about Kinect, and equivalent Sony offering. These things communicate with central servers to update firmware regularly. So in a single point of vulnerability you can get access to millions of always on cameras and microphones across entire world.
i put stickers over any laptop and slate cameras unless I want to use them. Audio is harder to control. Why don't hardware manufacturers provide a privacy shutter that obscures the built in cameras unless you choose to open them?
It is physically possible to turn that camera on without turning the light on but it requires a firmware update. If your computer is compromised or has a backdoor there is no telling what happens there.
I think it is kind of funny that Samsung makes these smart TVs that watch and listen to you all the time, but if you visit their campus in Seoul they put little stickers over all the camera ports on your phones and laptops, over your USB ports, and you're not allowed to bring in USB sticks at all.
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[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 46.9 ms ] threadArticle doesn't provide any examples. Does anyone else have examples of this happening or is this just FUD?
There was the instance of LG being outed for collecting the names of images/movies/etc read from USB media being reported back to a central server but not in the same Orwellian sense that webcams forever monitoring video streams and archiving conversations.
I haven't read of any exploits of smart TVs being used to monitor subject. Feasible? Sure. Reality? Probably not.
Feasible? Very. Reality? We don't hear about every detected exploit ... Smart TVs are new enough that, even if this _is_ happening today, we won't hear about it in the media or online for quite some time.
In college I actually discovered (6 months after it started) that a group of students had hacked my PC and were using it to host a private message board. Had no idea until someone from the school contacted me and told me to shut down my "unapproved social network" ...
http://www.samsung.com/global/microsite/tv/2013_vi/mobile/ht...