Article 68FHY Anker Finally Comes Clean About Its Eufy Security Cameras

Anker Finally Comes Clean About Its Eufy Security Cameras

by
BeauHD
from Slashdot on (#68FHY)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Verge: First, Anker told us it was impossible. Then, it covered its tracks. It repeatedly deflected while utterly ignoring our emails. So shortly before Christmas, we gave the company an ultimatum: if Anker wouldn't answer why its supposedly always-encrypted Eufy cameras were producing unencrypted streams -- among other questions -- we would publish a story about the company's lack of answers. It worked. In a series of emails to The Verge, Anker has finally admitted its Eufy security cameras are not natively end-to-end encrypted -- they can and did produce unencrypted video streams for Eufy's web portal, like the ones we accessed from across the United States using an ordinary media player. But Anker says that's now largely fixed. Every video stream request originating from Eufy's web portal will now be end-to-end encrypted -- like they are with Eufy's app -- and the company says it's updating every single Eufy camera to use WebRTC, which is encrypted by default. Reading between the lines, though, it seems that these cameras could still produce unencrypted footage upon request. That's not all Anker is disclosing today. The company has apologized for the lack of communication and promised to do better, confirming it's bringing in outside security and penetration testing companies to audit Eufy's practices, is in talks with a "leading and well-known security expert" to produce an independent report, is promising to create an official bug bounty program, and will launch a microsite in February to explain how its security works in more detail. Those independent audits and reports may be critical for Eufy to regain trust because of how the company has handled the findings of security researchers and journalists. It's a little hard to take the company at its word! But we also think Anker Eufy customers, security researchers and journalists deserve to read and weigh those words, particularly after so little initial communication from the company. That's why we're publishing Anker's full responses [here]. As highlighted by Ars Technica, some of the notable statements include: - Its web portal now prohibits users from entering "debug mode."- Video stream content is encrypted and inaccessible outside the portal.- While "only 0.1 percent" of current daily users access the portal, it "had some issues," which have been resolved.- Eufy is pushing WebRTC to all of its security devices as the end-to-end encrypted stream protocol.- Facial recognition images were uploaded to the cloud to aid in replacing/resetting/adding doorbells with existing image sets, but has been discontinued. No recognition data was included with images sent to the cloud.- Outside of the "recent issue with the web portal," all other video uses end-to-end encryption.- A "leading and well-known security expert" will produce a report about Eufy's systems.- "Several new security consulting, certification, and penetration testing" firms will be brought in for risk assessment.- A "Eufy Security bounty program" will be established.- The company promises to "provide more timely updates in our community (and to the media!)."

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