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Your Smart TV is Spying On You

Your Smart TV is Spying On YouMany people will find a smart TV under their tree this year. Smart TVs are like regular televisions but with an internet connection. The global smart TVs market is expected to reach 249.9M units by 2024. And all those smart TVs may be spying on you. A while ago I wrote about Vizio (VZIO) getting caught invading your privacy by collecting and selling your personal data. Despite the fact that Vizo had to pay a $2.2M fine, smart TV manufacturers continue to spy on their customers.

Data leakZDNet reports that that smart TVs send user data to tech titans including Facebook (FB), Google (GOOG), and Netflix. These devices are spying on you even when they are idle. U.S. and UK researchers say smart television sets produced by popular vendors including Samsung (005930), Apple (AAPL), and LG (LGLD), alongside content and app streaming devices such as Amazon (AMZN) FireTV, and Roku, are sending out information potentially without the knowledge or consent of users.

Smart TV's sharing users' personal data

Financial Times

Your Smart TV is Spying On You

In a paper titled, “Information Exposure From Consumer IoT Devices” (PDF), the team said that 34,586 controlled experiments found that 88% of devices send information to firms other than the device manufacturer; 56% of U.S. devices and 83.8% of UK devices send your info overseas. They also report every device they studied exposed some kind of information in plain-text.

eavesdroppingThe researchers from Northeastern University and Imperial College London found that 37% could “reliably inferred” user and device behavior from eavesdropping on the user’s interactions with television sets and other household IoT products.

The study found that almost half of the tested devices contacted Amazon. That includes devices not manufactured by Amazon. David Choffnes, one of the authors of the paper warns that Amazon has a lot of information about what you are doing in your home.

According to the paper location data and IP addresses were commonly sent by our IoT devices to third parties in the cloud including Netflix, Spotify, Microsoft (MSFT), Akamai (AKAM), and Google.

Netflix logoWhen it came to smart TVs, however, almost all of the devices included in the study would contact Netflix — whether or not a TV was configured with an account for the content streaming service. “This, at the very least, exposes information to Netflix about the model of [a] TV at a given location,” the paper reads.

Some of the tech titans collecting your data responded to the researchers.

  • Facebook said that it was “common” for services with Facebook integrated into them to send data to third-party services.
  • Netflix said that data transfers were “confined to how Netflix performs and appears on screen,” and
  • Google said user preferences and consent levels dictate how publishers “may share data with Google’s that’s similar to data used for ads in apps or on the web.”

Internet-connected smart TVs combined with streaming services like Netflix and Hulu seem to be a cord-cutter’s dream. But like anything else that connects to the internet, it opens up smart TVs to security vulnerabilities and hackers. But as is the case with most other internet-connected devices, manufacturers often don’t put security as a priority. Not only that, many smart TVs come with a camera and a microphone that attackers can access.

FBI warning

FBI issued a warning about smart TVsBecause manufacturers don’t put security as a priority, the FBI issued a warning about the risks that smart TVs pose. The FBI warned that hackers can take control of your unsecured smart TV and in worst cases, take control of the camera and microphone to watch and listen in.

… TV manufacturers and app developers may be listening and watching you, that television can also be a gateway for hackers to come into your home … your unsecured TV can give him or her an easy way in the backdoor through your router.

TechCrunch notes that some of the biggest attacks targeting smart TVs were developed by the CIA, but were stolen. The files were later published online by WikiLeaks.

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If you are interested in inspecting the IoT network traffic in your smart home, Princeton University has developed and released an open source tool called IoT Inspector. The software uses ARP spoofing to analyze what IoT devices are connected to the Internet, how much data is exchanged, and how often information is traded.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Data Privacy Day

Data Privacy DayData Privacy Day is January 28, 2019. Data Privacy Day began in 2008 as a celebration of the signing of Convention 108, the first legally binding international treaty dealing with privacy and data protection. The National Cyber Security Alliance (NCSA) leads the Data Privacy Day campaign. Here are some tips from the NCSA to own your online presence.

Digital footprintThe first step is to STOP. THINK. CONNECT.™: take safety measures, think about the consequences of your actions and connect knowing you have taken steps to safeguard yourself and your family when online.

Share with care. What you post can last a lifetime: Any information shared online can easily be copied and is almost impossible to take back. Consider who might see a post and how it might be perceived in the future.Protect it.

Protect your infoProtect your info. Information about the games you play and what you search for online, has value – just like money how else does Zuck make $6 million a day? Be selective with the information you give to apps and websites.

Own your online presence.  Learn how to use the privacy and security settings on your favorite online games, apps and platforms.

Stay current. Keep pace with new ways to stay safe online: Keep up with new technology and ways to manage privacy. Visit staysafeonline.org or other trusted websites for the latest information about ways to stay safe online.

Personal information is like money. Value it. Protect it. If you don’t you will be the victim of a data breach.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him at LinkedInFacebook and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Protect Yourself from Facebook

Protect Yourself from FacebookJust in case you have been sleeping under a rock the past couple of weeks, social media giant Facebook (FB) was hacked again. In a presser on 10/12/2018, the social networker admitted that nearly 30 million Facebook users were hacked. This is on top of the 50 million user accounts that Mark Zuckerberg’s company allowed Cambridge Analytics to steal.

Facebook did not apologize for exposing its users’ informationDuring the presser, Facebook did not apologize for exposing its users’ information but noted that it was cooperating with the FBI, the US Federal Trade Commission, the Irish Data Protection Commission, and other authorities on the data breach.

The attack involved the capture of Facebook “access tokens,” or digital keys that allow websites to recognize who someone is and keep them logged in. Using accounts they already controlled, the attackers used an “automated technique” to exploit Facebook’s “View As” functionality and steal access tokens for some 400,000 people. Hackers then used friend lists from those 400,000 accounts to obtain access tokens for another 30 million people (Here’s how to find out if you were hacked). Facebook tracked this hack to a change it made to its video uploading feature over a year ago in July 2017, and how that change affected View As.

Facebook confirmed on Friday that the hack compromised the personal and contact information of 30 million users. The compromised personal data includes:

  • Information sharingName
  • Phone number
  • Email address
  • Username,
  • Gender,
  • Locale/language,
  • Relationship status,
  • Religion,
  • Hometown,
  • Self-reported current city,
  • Birthdate,
  • Device types used to access Facebook,
  • Education,
  • Work,
  • The last 10 places they checked into or were tagged in,
  • Website,
  • People or Pages they follow and,
  • The 15 most recent searches.

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Mozilla Firefox web browserI have been warning about the dangers of Facebook since 2011. I use the Facebook Container extension for Firefox to helps prevent Facebook from tracking me around the web. The Facebook Container is an extension to the Desktop Firefox 57 and higher (it does not work on Firefox for mobile).

The Facebook Container is a tool to limit what data others can obtain from you. It works by isolating your Facebook identity into a separate container that makes it harder for Facebook to track your visits to other websites with third-party cookies.

When you install the extension it deletes the Facebook cookies on the computer and logs you out of Facebook. The next time you navigate to Facebook it will load in a new blue-colored browser tab (the “Container”).

Facebook containerYou can log in and use Facebook normally when in the Facebook Container. If you click on a non-Facebook link or navigate to a non-Facebook website in the URL bar, these pages will load outside of the container.

Clicking Facebook Share buttons on other browser tabs will load them within the Facebook Container. You should know that using these buttons passes information to Facebook about the website that you shared from.

Because you will be logged into Facebook only in the Container, embedded Facebook comments and Like buttons in tabs outside the Facebook Container will not work. This prevents Facebook from associating information about your activity on websites outside of Facebook to your Facebook identity.

 Facebook Share buttons passes information to Facebook about the website that you shared fromIn addition, websites that allow you to create an account or log in using your Facebook credentials will generally not work properly. Because this extension is designed to separate Facebook use from use of other websites, this behavior is expected.

It is important to know that this extension doesn’t prevent Facebook from mishandling the data that it already has, or permitted others to obtain, about you. Facebook still will have access to everything that you do while you are on facebook.com, including your Facebook comments, photo uploads, likes, any data you share with Facebook connected apps, etc.

It is important to remember that other ad networks will try to correlate your Facebook activities with your regular browsing.

In addition to using the Facebook Container extension, you can further protect yourself from Facebook by changing your Facebook settings, using Private Browsing, enabling Tracking Protection, and blocking third-party cookies.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Social Media Explained With Coffee

Social Media Explained With CoffeeFollowers of the Bach Seat know we love coffee. Coffee can do many wonderful things like make mornings better and even explain social media. Twin Creek Media posted this coffee infographic which uses coffee to describe the differences between flavors of social media.

 

Social Media Explained With Coffee

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

 

OMG Texting b 25 !

OMG Texting b 25 !This week marks the 25th birthday of text messages. Texting is more properly known as SMS. On Dec. 3, 1992, 22-year-old Sema Group software architect Neil Papworth typed the first SMS (Short Message Service) message, “Merry Christmas” on a computer and sent it over a  GSM network in the UK, to an Orbitel 901 handset owned by then-Vodafone director Richard Jarvis.

 SMS serviceIn 1993, a year after the first text message was sent, Nokia (NOK) set up the first commercial SMS service in Finland. Nokia was the first handset manufacturer whose total GSM phone line supported users sending SMS text messages. In 1997, Nokia became the first manufacturer to produce a mobile phone with a full keyboard: the Nokia 9000i Communicator.

Texting adoption

SMS adoption was slow at first, with only 0.4 text messages sent per month in 1995. The fact that UK users could only send SMS messages to those on the same network was a big problem until the restriction was lifted in 1999.  However, as smartphone technology developed and text messages became easier to use, SMS popularity ballooned. As mobile phones became more popular, texting skyrocketed. By 2007, the Brits were sending 66 billion SMS messages a year and in 2012, they sent 151 billion texts.

Nokia 9000i CommunicatorIn the U.S. SMS was slower to catch on, mainly because mobile operators charged more for texts and less for voice calls, and because of the popularity and availability of PC-to-PC instant messaging or IM. However, in the United States, 45 billion text messages were sent per month in 2007, a figure that became 167 billion per month in 2011. In June 2017, 781 billion text messages were being sent in the United States per month according to the experts.

U.S. Texts Sent

MonthNumber of Text Messages Sent Each MonthIncreased Number of Text Messages Sent YoY% Increased Number of Text Messages Sent YoY
June 2017
781.000,000,000147,000,000,000431.3%
June 2016634,000,000,00073,000,000,000768.5%
June 2014561,000,000,00063,000,000,000790.5%
June 2013498,000,000,00075,000,000,000564.0%
June 2012423,000,000,00056,000,000,000655.4%
June 2011367,000,000,000126,000,000,000205.8%
June 2010247,000,000,00086,000,000,000187.2%
June 2009161,000,000,00086,000,000,00087.2%
June 200878,000,000,00030,000,000,000150.0%
June 200745,000,000,00032,500,000,00038.5%
June 200612,500,000,0005,250,000,000138.1%
June 2005
7,250,000,0004,390,000,00065.1%
June 20042,860,000,0001,660,000,00072.3%
June 20031,200,000,0002270,000,000344.4%
June 200133,000,00021,000,00057.1%
June 200012,000,000
Text Message Statistics – United States from Statistic Brain (www.statisticbrain.com)

With 25 years under its belt, many people wonder if the end of the line is near for SMS. This is because apps such as Apple‘s (AAPL) iMessage, Google‘s (GOOG) Hangouts, Facebook‘s (FB) Messenger, WhatsApp, and SnapChat have become very popular.

Closed systems

Chat applicationThese new chat applications also marked a more fundamental shift away from an open standard that anyone could use (even if your operator charged you) to closed messaging systems controlled by technology giants. Text messages, however, might not be going away soon. SMS is a very practical and easy-to-use communication method, especially for areas and countries that do not have reliable internet connections.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.