We've all seen this movie: The lights inexplicably start to flicker and a naive homeowner writes it off as just a glitch. But no! There's something... in ... the house.
In the smart home age, that horror scenario could actually come to life — except the intruders aren't angry spirits, they're hackers.
A new report from Check Point Research, a cyber threat intelligence outfit, shows how a vulnerability in a Philips Hue smart lightbulb could allow attackers to gain control over the home or business network of which the bulb is a part.
Philips Hue and other smart lightbulbs allow users to control the lighting with an app or smart assistant. They're convenient and fun (they change colors!), but apparently making innocuous appliances in your home "smart" is not without its downsides.
The assault scenario is truly spooky. Check Point researchers used a previously discovered vulnerability in the smart bulb to hijack it. They then control the bulb's functioning, causing it to become unresponsive or even — gasp — flicker.
Since the bulbs no longer respond to their owner's control, this prompts the user to reset the bulb in the app that controls it. Doing that allows the hackers to spread their malware to the smart home hub between the bulb and the home network (on a popular wireless protocol called ZigBee), which allows it to gain access to the rest of the connected devices on the network. Home: invaded.
Here's a video of how it all goes down.
Check Point Research made the company that owns Philips Hue bulbs, Signify, aware of the threat in November 2019. Bulb owners should have received an automatic update, but can now also manually update their firmware to prevent against this sort of attack.
This scenario only demonstrated the vulnerability of these specific smart bulbs, but Check Point told Mashable that it could shine a light on possible threats from other smart home products.
"The fact that IoT products are connected to a central network means they can serve as a new 'attack vector' and are a means to get right inside the central network and inject it with malicious files," a Check Point Research representative said. "We showed an example of how this works, but the danger is potentially much larger."
Almost makes you wish your home was dumb again...
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Hackers can hijack Philips Hue smart bulbs to take over your home-夜以继日网
sitemap
文章
839
浏览
114
获赞
149
Apple's iPhone 12 studio lets you mix and match iPhone colors and accessories
Unsure which iPhone 12 color would match best with a Saddle Brown MagSafe Wallet? Apple has a fix.OvA government shutdown means bad news for Fat Bear Week
A looming government shutdown would suspend the internet's annual celebration of the fat bears.The sBest Apple deal: Restored AirPods Pro on sale for only $160 at Walmart
Save $89: As of August 24, a pair of refurbished AirPods Pro is on sale for $160 at Walmart, which iFind out your iPhone's trade
Apple is announcing new iPhones. You can find the new flagship smartphone lineup right here:The 6.1-Chemistry Nobel awarded to developers of lithium
Three scientists have been awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for their development of lithium-ionNASA's DART planetary defense test hit an asteroid. Watch what happened next.
The 1998 blockbuster Armageddonwas about a fictional last-ditch attempt by NASA to stop a speeding aMicrosoft is testing Bing Chat on Chrome and Safari
Following reports from users, Microsoft has confirmed that Bing Chat is coming to other browsers besNASA's DART planetary defense test hit an asteroid. Watch what happened next.
The 1998 blockbuster Armageddonwas about a fictional last-ditch attempt by NASA to stop a speeding aGoogle buys Fitbit for $2.1 billion
Apple Watch needs to watch out.Well, that remains to be seen, but the competition is about to get aFrance suspends iPhone 12 sales, claiming high radiation levels
While Apple unveiled the iPhone 15, France halted production of the iPhone 12. On Tuesday, the sameJames Webb telescope image isn't just glorious. It shows warped space.
Space is awfully psychedelic.There are objects in the universe so massive — often clusters ofHow to change the order of photos in a carousel on Instagram
Sick of the way your Instagram feed looks? You can change the order of photos in a photo dump to creFacebook engineer quits, says company is 'profiting off hate'
A Facebook engineer has published a scathing resignation letter accusing the company of "profiting oNASA aims to land on the moon in 2 years. Why that won't happen.
After an over 50-year absence, NASA astronauts will return to the moon — just not as soon as tAn iPhone 15 with USB
The rumored iPhone 15 with USB-C is so momentous, it might even convert Android users.In a survey co