Khaleej Times

Xiongmai to recall up to 10,000 webcams after hack

- Sijia Jiang

hong kong — Up to 10,000 webcams will be recalled in the aftermath of a cyber attack that blocked access last week to some of the world’s biggest websites, Chinese manufactur­er Hangzhou Xiongmai Technology told Reuters on Tuesday.

In Washington, a member of the US Senate Intelligen­ce committee asked three federal agencies what steps the government can take to prevent cyber criminals from compromisi­ng electronic devices.

Friday’s Internet outage alarmed security experts because it leveraged a new type of attack using simple webcams and other connected devices that often lack proper security.

Hackers harnessed hundreds of thousands of those devices globally to flood US-based Internet infrastruc­ture provider Dyn with so much traffic that it could not cope, cutting access to major websites including PayPal, Spotify and Twitter.

The US Department of Homeland Security said it had discussed the attacks in a conference call with 18 major communicat­ions service providers and was working to develop a new set of “strategic principles” for securing Internet-connected devices.

Manufactur­ers today are flooding the market with cheap, insecure devices, with few market incentives to design the products with security in mind

Mark Warner, US Senator

The intelligen­ce committee member, US Senator Mark Warner, a Democrat, sent letters asking DHS, the Federal Communicat­ions Commission (FCC) and Federal Trade Commission if they have adequate tools for combating the threat posed by “bot net” armies of infected electronic devices.

“Manufactur­ers are flooding the market with cheap, insecure devices, with few market incentives to design the products with security in mind, or to provide ongoing support,” Warner said.

Xiongmai said it would recall some surveillan­ce cameras sold in the United States after researcher­s identified they had been targeted in the attack.

Liu Yuexin, Xiongmai’s marketing director, told Reuters the company would recall the first few batches of surveillan­ce cameras made in 2014 that monitor rooms or shops for personal, rather than industrial, use.

Xiongmai had now fixed loopholes in earlier products, prompting users to change default passwords and block telnet access, Liu said. He declined to give an exact number of vulnerable devices, but estimated it at fewer than 10,000.

Xiongmai devices were unlikely to suffer similar attacks in China and elsewhere outside the United States, where they are typically used in more secure industrial networks, Liu said. — Reuters

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