this post was submitted on 11 Aug 2025
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"Nyx argues that the notion of requiring public housing residents to keep a hackable device that can become an audio eavesdropping tool in their apartment may represent the most disturbing application of the Halo 3C. “That kind of took it up a notch as far as how egregious this entire product line is,” Nyx says. “Most people have an expectation that their home isn’t bugged, right?”

As sensors like the Halo 3C proliferate across schools and even homes, Vasquez-Garcia says the biggest takeaway from his and Nyx’s findings ought to be that putting microphones and internet connections into every device in our lives as simple as a smoke detector is a decision that carries real risk. “If people remember one thing from this, it should be: Don’t blindly trust every internet of things device just because it claims to be for safety,” Vasquez-Garcia says. “The real issue is trust. The more we accept devices that say 'not recording' at face value, the more we normalize surveillance without really knowing what's inside or bothering to question it.”"

https://www.wired.com/story/school-bathroom-vape-detector-audio-bug/

#Cybersecurity #USA #Motorola #Surveillance #Privacy #Hacking #IoT #SmartObjects

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[–] tasket@infosec.exchange 1 points 2 months ago

@remixtures@tldr.nettime.org In the "Everything has IOT, mics & cams" category...