Skip to main content

Think twice before making your home too smart — it may make it vulnerable to attack

Zigbee War Flying
Making smart cities may be a rather dumb idea. As it turns out, in our nascent efforts to turn everything into a connected device, we’ve also opened ourselves up to rather terrifying hacks and attacks. As per a recent report from the The New York Times recently noted, “Putting a bunch of wirelessly connected devices in one area could prove irresistible to hackers. And it could allow them to spread malicious code through the air.”

One potential airborne weapon? Drones. In a paper published Thursday, researchers from the Weizmann Institute of Science near Tel Aviv, Israel and Dalhousie University in Halifax, Canada exploited a flaw in technology frequently found in a number of smart home devices, including lights, switches, locks, thermostats, and more. In their work, the researchers looked into the Philips Hue smart light bulb and found that a drone could actually infect a single bulb with a worm that would then create a domino effect.

Alternatively, the researchers found, they could plant an infection in a building from a car located as much as 229 feet away.

The worst part of all this, experts noted, is that a bug could be built and delivered using nothing more than an “autonomous attack kit” based on “readily available equipment” that would cost just a few hundred dollars. That is to say, these aren’t hugely challenging attacks that would be difficult and expensive to execute — quite the opposite, in fact.

Of course, the researchers alerted Philips as to the vulnerability in their device, and a fix was issued in October. But all the same, with the ubiquity of other smart home devices, this patch may not be enough to solve the problem overall.

So be careful before you turn your home into a smart home — we may not yet be ready to be quite so connected.

Lulu Chang
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Fascinated by the effects of technology on human interaction, Lulu believes that if her parents can use your new app…
Smart home tech for your office
temperature controlled ember mug deal best buy flash sale white charging

If you’re like most of us, you’ve increasingly spent time in your home office over the last few years and could benefit from adding more smart home tech to your space. Smart tech makes life a little easier and allows you to remove some steps and inconveniences from your routine. Not only that, but being able to issue voice commands or have lights and fans set up to activate when needed can improve your comfort and mood and even put a little change back in your wallet.

Add ambient lighting
Just because the downtown office has harsh fluorescents and bright white lighting doesn’t mean your awesome home office needs to be the same. It’s time to make your lighting funkier and less eye-strain-inducing.

Read more
Is your smart home child-safe?
Roborock S7 cleaning while kids and pets play.

Smart home devices excel at saving time and taking orders, as well as provide us with a lot more data about how our homes behave. But those capabilities are mostly focused on adults – what happens when you add kids to the mix? While some brands like to tout the ability to track or monitor your kids, it’s not always that simple.

Families quickly learn that their children can become masters at using smart home tech, but that doesn’t mean all home automation is safe for them. That’s especially true for toddlers who may not understand what smart homes can do yet.

Read more
How loud is too loud for your smart devices?
An Amazon Echo in living room.

When people purchase smart speakers like a Google Nest or an Amazon Echo, one of their common concerns is if the audio is loud enough to fill a room. Can it power a party? Can you hear it over kitchen cooking sounds?

Now we want to ask similar questions from another angle: Can today’s powerful smart and Bluetooth speakers get too loud? What risks does playing audio and top levels involve? Is it always okay to crank the volume when you feel like some extra bass? Let’s get down to the details.
Smart speakers and hearing damage

Read more