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SAVANNAH, GA (WTOC) -
Home security video appears to show a man stealing a neighbor's bike, and WTOC was able to speak exclusively with the people who live at the residence on W. 40th Street.
Watch as this surveillance video appears to show a man stealing bicycle right off someone's front porch.
According to the police report, John Bronson's home security cameras capture the apparent crime, almost clear as day. The bicycle belonged to Bronson's duplex neighbor, but Bronson invested in the cameras after someone ran into his home and stole his laptop.
The owner of the bike said if it weren't for the security video, he may never have a chance at getting his bike back and catching the person who took it.
According to Bronson, the other angle shows the man riding the bike away, video which he turned over to police. If you recognize the man in the video or if you have any info on the case you should call police.
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Police searching for bike thief after home security camera catches suspect in the act
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CRAZY Boat Accident Caught On Camera
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CRAZY Boat Accident Caught On Camera - Video
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Clash of clans - FaiLtAge 5 ( No ones safe this time! )
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Clash of clans - FaiLtAge 5 ( No ones safe this time! ) - Video
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Mediacom Home Controller: Add Contacts and Get Notifications
https://mediacomcable.com/site/home_security.html Learn how to add a contact and easily manage your Mediacom Home Security and Automation System remotely with our email and email-to-text ...
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Mediacom Home Controller: Add Contacts and Get Notifications - Video
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According to a report released this morning by security provider Veracode, many of the Internet of Things devices that consumers are buying for their increasingly connected homes are vulnerable to hacker exploits. While Veracode looked at different devices and vulnerabilities, its overall findings mirror those by Synack, which we reported on last month.
According to the Veracode report, for example, a vulnerability in the Ubi voice-controlled Internet appliance could enable criminals to monitor the ambient noise or light in a room to determine whether someone is home or away. Similarly, a weakness in the Chamberlain MyQ Garage garage door opener could alert thieves to a doors opening and closing, again giving a clue to good times to break in.
The Internet of Things is getting more and more popular, said Veracode security research architect Brandon Creighton, and its grown into a phenomenon that doesnt just exist in the realms of technical people who are buying little components and plugging them together. Its now a consumer-level thing, and you can buy most of these devices at a Target or a Home Depot. Even though theyre packaged as hardware devices, in reality theyre just like any other technological system in that theyre primarily comprised of software. And software can be hacked if its properly protected.
Compromising the Chamberlain MyQ Garage could give thieves information about whether the door is open or closedor even let them open it themselves.
In designing the study, Creighton said we wanted to choose devices that had an impact in the real world, or at least the potential for it. To that end, his team looked at always-on systems that are marketed to end users who dont possess any particular technical expertise. In addition to the Chamberlain MyQ Garage and the Ubi, the firm tested the Chamberlain MyQ Internet Gateway, the SmartThings Hub, the Wink Hub, and the Wink Relay.
Researchers conducted 10 tests, classifying the results into four categories: user-facing cloud services, back-end cloud services, mobile application interfaces, and device-debugging interfaces. They found vulnerabilities across most categories in all but one of the devices.
The SmartThings hub did pretty well on the tests we applied, Creighton said. We didnt do an in-depth security review on every aspect of the devicewe didnt go into the firmware. Were not saying theyre secure, were saying that for these tests, they did pretty well.
The Veracode report looks at the hypothetical effects of drastic security breaches of the systems tested. An Ubi attacker, for example, could learn a lot about the targets personal life and habits.
Veracode installed and configured the devices according to their included documentation, and then monitored and captured all the communication between the devices and their surroundings. When youre thinking about IoT devices as a consumer, its important to think about the fact that these are not just isolated things sitting in your house, Creighton said, there are any number of services they may be communicating with.
And the security of the system as a whole often relies on those services being secure as well. We didnt have permission to scan those services, so the flaws we did find were mostly in the devices themselves, and related to the communication between the devices and the servers.
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Many connected-home devices lack robust security features, security firm claims
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Mention Flir Systems to a security aficionado or a defense-industry watcher, and they'll probably mention thermal imaging, the technology that lets you see where the bad guys areor where theyve beenbased on their body heat. Today Flir announced its entry into the increasingly crowded home security camera business with the Flir FX. While were disappointed to report that the Flir FX isnt capable of thermal imaging, Flir has come up with a trick that could be even more useful when youre looking for evidence of a crime.
One of the most common problems with security cameras is sorting through all the video they capture in order to find the information thats most important. Fast-forwarding or rewinding hours of video to find the 10 seconds of crucial evidencethe burglar breaking in, the thief snatching your bike off the front porch, the house cleaner sneaking into your liquor cabinettakes the patience of Job and the eyes of a hawk.
Were solving the too much video problem, John Distelzweig, VP of Flirs security division, told me in a briefing last week. Were bringing forensic technology to the connected-home space. Weve taken a mid-range industrial camera, and added a MicroSD card and a battery so it can operate without Internet access for up to four hours.
The indoor Flir FX has a second battery in its base.
Flirs solution, dubbed RapidRecap, enables you to watch an entire days worth of video in just a few minutes. It combines dozens of time-stamped motion events into a single clip: So instead of watching the delivery person leave a package on your door, followed by several hours of inactivity; then seeing your letter carrier deliver the mail, and only after sitting through several more hours of innocuous activity, finally catching a thief purloin the package from your porch, you can watch all three of those peopleand as many more who happen to pass before your cameracome and go all at the same time. A box overlaid on each person displays the exact time their movement was captured. This is much easier to watch than to explain; fortunately, Flir has embedded a host of sample videos on this page of its website.
The Flir FX captures 1080p video and stores it on an included 8GB MicroSD card (the slot can accommodate cards with up to 64GB of capacity). The camera uploads the video clips it has captured to Flirs cloud-based servervia your 2.4GHz Wi-Fi networkas bandwidth allows. RapidRecap videos based on these clips are created on the server at the users request. The demos look terrific. We have a camera in house now and will be able to report soon on how well the technology works in the real world.
The camera has a 160-degree field of view and is equipped with infrared LEDs that can deliver up to 33 feet of range in a dark environment. The $200 camera can be enclosed in an IP66-rated outdoor housing, a waterproof sport housing ($60), or installed on a dashboard mount ($50). The outdoor enclosure includes powerful LEDs that increase the cameras night-vision range to 65 feet. Flir also sells the Flir FX preconfigured with the outdoor housing for $250.
One camera, four configurations, including one for action shooters (with the right accessories, that is).
As with many products in this class, youll need a paid subscription to get the most benefit from the Flir FX. Unlike most of its competitors, however, Flir offers a free tier that stores video motion events dating back 48 hours and enables you to create three RapidRecaps per month. Flir Cloud Plus provides seven days of storage and an unlimited number of RapidRecaps for $10 per month (new cameras come with a 30-day free trial to this level of service). If you need even more cloud storage, Flir Cloud Premium delivers 90 days of cloud storage for $20 per month.
Flir is taking preorders for the Flir FX now and expects to begin filling those orders by the middle of April.
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The versatile Flir FX home security camera delivers a slick forensic feature
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It's not just home broadband routers that have hopeless security: according to security outfit Veracode, cloudy home automation outfits also need to hang their collective heads in shame.
With nothing but standard by-the-manual configurations and network traffic capture but with no attacks against the devices or the cloud services the testers reckon they turned up a variety of vulnerabilities in kit from Chamberlain Group, SmartThings, Ubi and Wink.
It seems that if you're the kind of uber-lazy gadget-fan who can't imagine pressing a button to do something voice control is possible, you're matched by uber-lazy device developers. Versacode found that all but one of the devices it tested failed even its non-hostile vulnerability tests.
The products tested were Wink's WinkHub and Wink Relay home automation controllers; Unified Computer Intelligence's Ubi always-on voice activation system; SmartThings' home automation and home access control hub; and Chamberlain Groups' MyQ Garage (an Internet interface to garage door systems) and MyQ Internet Gateway (which extends control to switches and electrical outlets).
The tests covered:
The Veracode white paper is available with registration here.
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Your home automation things are a security nightmare
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In the latest blow to Internet of Things (IoT) security, an analysis of smart home devices has found flaws that could give attackers access to sensitive data or allow them to control door locks and sensors.
The research was performed by a team from application security firm Veracode for six up-to-date devices acquired in December and found serious issues in five of them. The tested devices were the Chamberlain MyQ Garage, the Chamberlain MyQ Internet Gateway, the SmartThings Hub, the Ubi from Unified Computer Intelligence Corporation, the Wink Hub and the Wink Relay.
All of these devices enable remote control and monitoring over the Internet of various home automation devices and sensors, including door locks, interior switches and power outlets. Most of them connect to cloud-based services and users can interact with them through Web portals or smartphone applications.
The Veracode team didnt look for vulnerabilities in the firmware of the tested devices, but instead analyzed the implementation and security of the communication protocols they use.
The researchers looked at the front-end connections, those between users and the cloud services, as well the back-end onesthose between the devices themselves and the cloud services.
For front-end connections, they found that with the exception of SmartThings Hub, none of the devices enforced strong passwords. In addition, the Ubi did not enforce encryption for user connections, exposing them to possible man-in-the-middle (MitM) attacks.
For back-end connections the situation was even worse. The Ubi and MyQ Garage did not employ encryption, did not offer adequate protection against man-in-the-middle attacks and did not protect against replay attacks, which enable man-in-the-middle (MitM) attackers to capture traffic and then play it back, potentially triggering unauthorized actions. In addition, the Ubi did not properly secure sensitive data.
MitM protection was lacking across all devices with the exception of the SmartThings Hub, either because TLS (Transport Layer Security) encryption was not used at all or because it was implemented without proper certificate validation.
This suggests that those who designed these IoT devices assumed that the local area networks theyll be installed on were secure. Thats an error, because research over the past several years have showed that if theres anything worse than the security of IoT devices, its the security of consumer routers. Security researchers find serious vulnerabilities in routers on a routine basis, most of which enable hackers to perform man-in-the-middle attacks, and those flaws have resulted in millions of routers being compromised in large-scale attacks over the past few years.
The misguided trust of IoT manufacturers in the security of home networks is also reflected by the debugging interfaces and other services their devices expose to such networks.
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Researchers show that IoT devices are not designed with security in mind
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Some day, we will all live in smart homes. Automated gadgets running on the Internet of Things will manage our lighting and heat, keep our appliances humming, and free us up to do more important things, like play Candy Crush Saga 24/7.
Before they do all that, though, the Internet of Things, or IoT, has a lot of growing up to do.
So far, tech startups have done a great job of churning out inexpensive gizmos that turn on the lights when you enter the room or start the coffee when you wake up, but theyve done a mostly terrible job of making sure random strangers cant also flip on your Philips Hue or control your Keurig.
Last July, Hewlett-Packard released a scathing report on the poor security of IoT devices, noting that more than seven out of 10 have some kind of vulnerability.
Over the past three years, devices like Nests smart thermostat, Kwiksets SmartKey lock, Foscams baby monitors, and thousands of home security cameras have been compromised in the lab or in the wild.
A report scheduled to be released on Wednesday by enterprise security firm Veracode details some of the ways IoT devices can be hacked, controlled remotely, and even used to spy on you.
Given the right circumstances, an external attacker could know when youre not home, open and close your garage door, turn your lights on or off, and even eavesdrop on your conversations.
Safe...for now
Thats the theory. In practice, at least for now, smart-home hacking isnt that big a concern.
IoT devices arent widespread enough yet to be tempting targets for hackers. Not when theyve got all these juicy insecure corporate databases to pilfer from.
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Your smart home will be hacked. Heres how to stop it
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Beware of Those Tiny Batteries
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Beware of Those Tiny Batteries - Video
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