Article RCJ4 Easily Hacked Tea Kettle Latest To Highlight Pathetic Internet Of Things 'Security'

Easily Hacked Tea Kettle Latest To Highlight Pathetic Internet Of Things 'Security'

by
Karl Bode
from Techdirt on (#RCJ4)
We've discussed at length that companies rushing to embrace the "Internet of Things" (read: networked devices for those of us not in marketing) tend to have completely forgotten a little something called device security. As a result we're now bombarded week after week with stories about cars that can be controlled remotely, televisions that share your unencrypted living room conversations with anybody on the Internet, and refrigerators that leave the door wide open to having your e-mail password stolen. Some of these are kind of cute exploits, but many of them could be potentially fatal.

While these companies are desperately trying to highlight the wonderful future of Internet connected devices, they've inadvertently been creating advertisements for why many devices should just remain stupid. Especially if you're going to cut corners in development so device security is an afterthought, or cut corners post release when it comes to quickly identifying and patching exploits.

The latest case in point: the $150 iKettle by UK company Smarter promises to save its users "two days a year in wasted waiting time" over traditional tea kettles. How? Users can remotely turn the kettle on from anywhere via smartphone app, potentially letting users walk into the house just as the kettle comes to a boil. Avoiding the horrible task of having to walk a few feet and wait a few minutes is the pinnacle of modern engineering to be sure; the problem is that for the better part of this year researchers have been noting that the security on the kettle was virtually nonexistent:
"If you haven't configured the kettle, it's trivially easy for hackers to find your house and take over your kettle," Munro says. "Attackers will need to setup a malicious network with the same SSID but with a stronger signal that the iKettle connects to before sending a disassociation packet that will cause the device to drop its wireless link. "So I can sit outside of your place with a directional antenna, point it at your house, knock your kettle of your access point, it connects to me, I send two commands and it discloses your wireless key in plain text."
The researchers call the current state of IOT security "utterly bananas," and warn readers of their blog not to "put pointless 'Internet of Things' devices on your home network, unless their security is proven." For what it's worth, the company behind the not-so-smart kettle tells several other news outlets that it will be updating the kettle's companion app to eliminate the security vulnerability -- sometime next month. So yeah, we've ingeniously "solved" the problem of having to walk a few feet to turn on the kettle, but created countless new problems while simultaneously advertising the benefits of competing dumb products.

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