Ashley LeMay and Dylan Blakeley recently installed a Ring security camera in the bedroom of their three daughters, giving the Mississippi parents an extra set of eyes — but not the ones that they had bargained for.
Four days after mounting the camera to the wall, a built-in speaker started piping the song "Tiptoe Through the Tulips" into the empty bedroom, footage from the device showed.
When the couple's 8-year-old daughter, Alyssa, checked on the music and turned on the lights, a man started speaking to her, repeatedly calling her a racial slur and saying he was Santa Claus. She screamed for her mother.
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What to expect from car hackers in 2020 and beyond | VentureBeat
If connected cars are the future, connected car hacking will need to become a dominant focus of cybersecurity. Unfortunately, the latest battlefront in cybersecurity is beginning to look hauntingly like IT cybersecurity: Companies respond after hackers expose glitches and security holes.
The majority of vehicles currently on the road are not yet connected and are certainly not self-driving, but the industry is carrying us toward driverless vehicles . Within two decades, more than a quarter of cars on the road will be autonomous, and even the cars that aren't self-driving will be connected . If that is the direction vehicles are taking, the industry has a responsibility to ensure the people in those vehicles are protected from cyberattacks .
How Vietnamese hackers are following China's lead to steal intellectual property | South China
FBI bets on decoy data in program to help companies confuse hackers - SlashGear
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23-year-old Indian hacker makes money finding bugs | Technology – Gulf News
New Delhi: Ethical hacking is no new concept and India has seen a breed of such young enthusiasts in the past. What has changed is the money that comes with it as cyber attacks on businesses across industries have grown multi-fold in the era of digital transformation.
Meet 23-year-old Shivam Vashist from north India, a hacker associated with San Francisco-based HackerOne which is a vulnerability coordination and bug bounty platform and boasts of clients like Starbucks, Instagram, Goldman Sachs, Twitter, Zomato and OnePlus.
Hackers Are Breaking Into Websites And Adding Links To Game Google
"I can see the allure of going after well-trafficked media sites — there are usually so many points of entry from contributors that all it takes is one good account to give wide access to the editorial content of a media outlet," Matthew Blackett, the publisher of Spacing, told BuzzFeed News.
"We do not welcome the addition of hacked sites, nor the hackers themselves. If such cases are identified, we stop working with the webmaster," a Sape spokesperson told BuzzFeed News.
Canadian lab pays hackers to recover data on 15M customers | FierceHealthcare
The company retrieved the information by making a payment, the company said but did not specify how much it paid the hackers.
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The stolen data was dated 2016 and earlier, the company said. The majority of customers are in British Columbia and Ontario, with relatively few customers in other locations.
According to documents the company filed with Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner of Ontario and the Office of the Information (IPC) and Privacy Commissioner for British Columbia (OIPC), the breach occurred around November 1.
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