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Toy Maker Hacked, Showing Kid Selfies Stored

  • TechDirt, Wednesday, December 2, 2015 10:01 AM
As companies race to embrace the inanely-named "internet of things" (IOT), security and privacy are usually a very distant afterthought. That's been made painfully apparent by "smart" refrigerators that expose your Gmail credentials, "smart" TVs that transmit your living room conversations unencrypted, or "smart" tea kettles that compromise your Wi-Fi network security. In all these examples the story remains the same: everybody's so excited to connect everything and anything to the internet, few companies can be bothered to do so intelligently and correctly.  And with the mad rush to bring this kind of aggressive myopia to toys, the lack of security is now impacting kids as well. Late last week a hacker revealed that he (or she) had hacked into the servers of Hong-Kong-based toy company Vtech, exposing the data collected by the company's "Kid Connect" service (which lets parents use smartphones to talk to kids using toy tablets and other devices). Once inside, the hacker obtained the names, email addresses, passwords, and home addresses of 4,833,678 parents, and the first names, genders and birthdays of more than 200,000 kids. 

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