How to secure your smarthome devices

Smart home appliances are one of the most beautiful developments in modern technology, without a doubt. We now have light bulbs, refrigerators, cameras and many other home appliances equipped with smart technology, adding convenience to our lives.

How to secure your smarthome devices

The thing to know is that these devices are often more vulnerable to intrusion than any other technology in your home. Malware that infects your computer can detect other devices connected to the network and take control of those devices.

Why do smart home appliances pose a risk to our security?

The primary reason why smart home appliances have such a high security risk is because they often use connectivity Bluetooth ή WiFi, with minimal security settings, to communicate with the rest of your home network. These smart home appliances are at high risk of packet leakage and intrusion.

Take, for example, smart lighting systems. There are many brands available - Xiaomi Yeelight, Philips Hue, LIFX, Ikea Tradfri. All of these brands operate on the same principle. We install the lamps in a regular socket and then connect them to the WiFi of your house. Once connected to WiFi, we can control them from smartphone us using applications such as Home, Amazon Alexa, etc.

How to secure your smarthome devices

However, there are many safety with these devices. Let's start with the most basic.

When we first turn on these devices, they are prone to piracy. A smart light bulb transmits its SSID without password encryption - literally anyone close enough can connect to the device until we set it to communicate exclusively with our personal WiFi network.

Second, even after configuring our smart device, there are still security flaws we need to be aware of. The lamps Philips Hue, for example, found that they passed API keys in plain text. This means zero encryption.

On this blog, security investigators have shown how they can easily break into Philips Hue bulbs by sending light control commands. Basically, a malicious hacker could easily destroy your home lighting.

While this may be considered a simple malicious prank, things get a lot scarier when it comes to smart surveillance cameras. One family ran into such problems when WiFi-connected Nest surveillance cameras were hacked and began transmitting threatening messages through the built-in speakers. Imagine surveillance cameras in our home being targeted by hackers.

Worse still, because these devices connect to the internet through our home network, they can be turned into botnet devices. It has been done several times in the past. Imagine, the data from central banks to come down from a group of refrigerators connected to ours. It may sound funny but it is not.

We could go on with many examples, but honestly, there are so many things we will discover that we will never finish. Just type in Google "smart device hijacking" or "smart fridge botnet" or anything related to the intrusion of smart home devices.

The results include not only stories but also tutorials on how to easily break and tamper with these devices.

How to insure your home appliances

The good news is that there are many ways to secure your smart devices and home network.

  • Upgrade everything firmware: Manufacturers of smart home appliances regularly release software updates to fix security vulnerabilities and bring new features to consumers. You should have the habit of regularly checking and applying updates to these devices.
  • Use strong passwords: In most scenarios, hackers can breach smart home devices due to the overall weak security of the network. Make sure your WiFi network has the strongest possible encryption, which means WPA2 encryption, and a password other than your birthday, name, or similar.
  • Create an alternative network: It takes some configuration, but you should strongly consider it of an alternative WiFi network, such as a guest or mesh network, exclusively dedicated to your smart home devices.

Unplug Unused Devices: It may seem silly, but you really need your surveillance cameras and microphone-enabled music players plugged in and connected to your network all the time? Unplugging these devices when they're not in use can take the anxiety out of you and give you a sense of security that a stranger can't watch you through your own surveillance cameras whenever they want.

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Written by Anastasis Vasileiadis

Translations are like women. When they are beautiful they are not faithful and when they are faithful they are not beautiful.

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