polycrac
Super Star
So this was on the news today, antivirus warnings for TVs:
I've read the story, and it certainly plays down from the headline but I'm not going to call it clickbait. I know the Tizen OS runs on watches as well as TVs, but that's about all I know. My TV is ancient and rarely on and I have no smartwatch.
Have 'things' really gotten sophisticated enough to be worth attacking? What info do they hold that simply factory resetting isn't an option? I sort of assumed that they were entirely an 'output' device - that maybe someone could spot how many saved 'come dine with me' episodes were on your box but that's all.
Am I naive in thinking the casting device is where the security needs to be, or is it just that people use the TV instead of a casting device, and it holds authentication/payment details itself?
Samsung TVs should be regularly virus-checked, the company says
The technology company tweeted its QLED-branded sets should be scanned once every few weeks.
www.bbc.co.uk
I've read the story, and it certainly plays down from the headline but I'm not going to call it clickbait. I know the Tizen OS runs on watches as well as TVs, but that's about all I know. My TV is ancient and rarely on and I have no smartwatch.
Have 'things' really gotten sophisticated enough to be worth attacking? What info do they hold that simply factory resetting isn't an option? I sort of assumed that they were entirely an 'output' device - that maybe someone could spot how many saved 'come dine with me' episodes were on your box but that's all.
Am I naive in thinking the casting device is where the security needs to be, or is it just that people use the TV instead of a casting device, and it holds authentication/payment details itself?