Home Page | Photos | Video | Forum | Most Popular | Special Reports | Biz China Weekly
Make Us Your Home Page
Most Searched: G20  CPC  South China Sea  Belt and Road Initiative  AIIB  

Smart TV may let out your secrets to CIA

Source: Xinhua   2017-03-10 17:08:28

NEW YORK, March 10 (Xinhua) -- WikiLeaks on Tuesday warns that you may have to recheck your privacy settings before your secrets are divulged to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) through smart TVs.

According to WikiLeaks' latest release, Weeping Angel, an attack toolkit designed by the CIA and the British security agency, aims at Samsung's smart TVs to make them appear to be switched off, but in fact they are not.

"There are people out there that you want us to spy on," Michael Hayden, an ex-CIA director, said in the Late Show in response to the Weeping Angel affair.

"You want us to have the ability to actually turn on that listening device inside the TV to learn that person's intentions. This is a wonderful capability," said Hayden.

Smart TVs are new favorites owned by households across the world. Its access to the Internet creates hidden hazards for hacking.

Panic has swept across world-wide among smart TV owners. People are afraid that their viewing habits might be tracked, or their personal conversations are wiretapped.

"The CIA reports show the USG developing vulnerabilities in US products, then intentionally keeping the holes open. Reckless beyond words," former CIA employee Edward Snowden tweeted on Wednesday.

Editor: Tian Shaohui
Related News
           
Photos  >>
Video  >>
  Special Reports  >>
Xinhuanet

Smart TV may let out your secrets to CIA

Source: Xinhua 2017-03-10 17:08:28
[Editor: huaxia]

NEW YORK, March 10 (Xinhua) -- WikiLeaks on Tuesday warns that you may have to recheck your privacy settings before your secrets are divulged to the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) through smart TVs.

According to WikiLeaks' latest release, Weeping Angel, an attack toolkit designed by the CIA and the British security agency, aims at Samsung's smart TVs to make them appear to be switched off, but in fact they are not.

"There are people out there that you want us to spy on," Michael Hayden, an ex-CIA director, said in the Late Show in response to the Weeping Angel affair.

"You want us to have the ability to actually turn on that listening device inside the TV to learn that person's intentions. This is a wonderful capability," said Hayden.

Smart TVs are new favorites owned by households across the world. Its access to the Internet creates hidden hazards for hacking.

Panic has swept across world-wide among smart TV owners. People are afraid that their viewing habits might be tracked, or their personal conversations are wiretapped.

"The CIA reports show the USG developing vulnerabilities in US products, then intentionally keeping the holes open. Reckless beyond words," former CIA employee Edward Snowden tweeted on Wednesday.

[Editor: huaxia]
010020070750000000000000011100001361190381