The Mercury News

Tesla, hospitals among businesses whose video feeds exposed in hack

- By William Turton

A group of hackers say they breached a massive trove of security-camera data collected by Silicon Valley startup Verkada, gaining access to live feeds of 150,000 surveillan­ce cameras inside hospitals, companies, police department­s, prisons and schools.

Companies whose footage was exposed include carmaker Tesla and software provider Cloudflare. In addition, hackers were able to view video from inside women’s health clinics, psychiatri­c hospitals and the offices of Verkada itself. Some of the cameras, including in hospitals, use facial-recognitio­n technology to identify and categorize people captured on the footage. The hackers say they also have access to the full video archive of all Verkada customers.

In a video seen by Bloomberg, a Verkada camera inside Florida hospital Halifax Health showed what appeared to be eight hospital staffers tackling a man and pinning him to a bed. Halifax Health is featured on Verkada’s public-facing website in a case study entitled: “How a Florida Healthcare Provider Easily Updated and Deployed a Scalable HIPAA Compliant Security System.”

Another video, shot inside a Tesla warehouse in Shanghai, shows workers on an assembly line. The hackers said they obtained access to 222 cameras in Tesla factories and warehouses.

The data breach was carried out by an internatio­nal hacker collective and intended to show the pervasiven­ess of video surveillan­ce and the ease with which systems could be broken into, said Tillie Kottmann, one of the hackers who claimed credit for breaching San Mateobased Verkada. Kottmann, who uses they/them pronouns, previously claimed credit for hacking chipmaker Intel and carmaker Nissan Motor. Kottmann said their reasons for hacking are “lots of curiosity, fighting for freedom of informatio­n and against intellectu­al property, a huge dose of anti-capitalism, a hint of anarchism — and it’s also just too much fun not to do it.”

“We have disabled all internal administra­tor accounts to prevent any unauthoriz­ed access,” a Verkada representa­tive said in a statement. “Our internal security team and external security firm are investigat­ing the scale and

scope of this potential issue.”

A person with knowledge of the matter said Verkada’s chief informatio­n security officer, an internal team and an external security firm are investigat­ing the incident. The company is working to notify customers and set up a support line to address questions, said the person, who requested anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigat­ion.

Representa­tives of Tesla, Cloudflare and other companies identified in this story didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. Representa­tives of the jails, hospitals and schools named in this article either declined to comment or didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

A video seen by Bloomberg shows officers in a police station in Stoughton, Massachuse­tts, questionin­g a man in handcuffs.

The hackers say they also gained access to the security cameras of Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticu­t, where a gunman killed more than 20 people in 2012.

Also available to the hackers were 330 security cameras inside the Madison County Jail in Huntsville, Alabama. Verkada offers a feature called “People Analytics,” which lets a customer “search and filter based on many different attributes, including gender traits, clothing color, and even a person’s face,” according to a Verkada blog post.

Images seen by Bloomberg show that the cameras inside the jail, some of which are hidden inside vents, thermostat­s and defibrilla­tors, track inmates and correction­al staff using the facial-recognitio­n technology. The hackers say they were able to access live feeds and archived video, in some cases including audio, of interviews between police officers and criminal suspects, all in the high-definition resolution known as 4K.

Kottmann said their group was able to obtain “root” access on the cameras, meaning they could use the cameras to execute their own code. That access could, in some instances, allow them to pivot and obtain access to the broader corporate network of Verkada’s customers, or hijack the cameras and use them as a platform to launch future hacks. Obtaining this degree of access to the camera didn’t require any additional hacking, as it was a built-in feature, Kottmann said.

The hackers’ methods were unsophisti­cated: they gained access to Verkada through a “Super Admin” account, allowing them to peer into the cameras of all of its customers. Kottmann says they found a user name and password for an administra­tor account publicly exposed on the internet. After Bloomberg contacted Verkada, the hackers lost access to the video feeds and archives, Kottmann said.

The hackers say they were able to peer into multiple locations of the luxury gym chain Equinox. At Wadley Regional Medical Center, a hospital in Texarkana, Texas, hackers say they looked through Verkada cameras pointed at nine ICU beds. Hackers also say they watched cameras at Tempe St. Luke’s Hospital, in Arizona, and were also able to see a detailed record of who used Verkada access control cards to open certain doors, and when they did so. A representa­tive of Wadley declined to comment.

The hack “exposes just how broadly we’re being surveilled, and how little care is put into at least securing the platforms used to do so, pursuing nothing but profit,” Kottmann said. “It’s just wild how I can just see the things we always knew are happening, but we never got to see.” Kottman said they gained access to Verkada’s system on Monday morning.

Verkada, founded in 2016, sells security cameras that customers can access and manage through the web. In January 2020, it raised $80 million in venture capital funding, valuing the company at $1.6 billion. Among the investors was Sequoia Capital, one of Silicon Valley’s oldest firms.

Kottmann calls the hacking collective “Advanced Persistent Threat 69420,” a light-hearted reference to the designatio­ns cybersecur­ity firms give to state sponsored hacking groups and criminal cybergangs.

In October 2020, Verkada fired three employees after reports surfaced that workers had used its cameras to take pictures of female colleagues inside the Verkada office and make sexually explicit jokes about them.

Verkada CEO Filip Kaliszan said in a statement to Vice at the time that the company “terminated the three individual­s who instigated this incident, engaged in egregious behavior targeting coworkers, or neglected to report the behavior despite their obligation­s as managers.”

Kottmann said they were able to download the entire list of thousands of Verkada customers, as well as the company’s balance sheet, which lists assets and liabilitie­s. As a closely held company, Verkada does not publish its financial statements. Kottman said hackers watched through the camera of a Verkada employee who had set one of the cameras up inside his home. One of the saved clips from the camera shows the employee completing a puzzle with his family.

“If you are a company who has purchased this network of cameras and you are putting them in sensitive places, you may not have the expectatio­n that in addition to being watched by your security team that there is some admin at the camera company who is also watching,” said Eva Galperin, director of cybersecur­ity at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, who was briefed on the breach by Bloomberg.

Inside Arizona’s Graham County detention facility, which has 17 cameras, videos are given titles by the center’s staff and saved to a Verkada account. One video, filmed in the “Commons Area,” is titled “ROUNDHOUSE KICK OOPSIE.” A video filed inside the “Rear Cell Block” is called “SELLERS SNIFFING/KISSING WILLARD???” Another video, filmed inside “Drunk Tank Exterior” is titled “AUTUMN BUMPS HIS OWN HEAD.” Two videos filmed from “Back Cell” are titled “STARE OFF - DONT BLINK!” and “LANCASTER LOSES BLANKET.”

The hackers also obtained access to Verkada cameras in Cloudflare offices in San Francisco, Austin, London and New York. The cameras at Cloudflare’s headquarte­rs rely on facial recognitio­n, according to images seen by Bloomberg.

Security cameras and facial-recognitio­n technology are often used inside corporate offices and factories to protect proprietar­y informatio­n and guard against an insider threat, said the EFF’s Galperin.

“There are many legitimate reasons to have surveillan­ce inside of a company,” Galperin added. “The most important part is to have the informed consent of your employees. Usually this is done inside the employee handbook, which no one reads.”

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