If there’s anything worse than picking an easy-to-hack password, it’s being assigned a default easy-to-hack password for your GPS tracker. And, yet, that’s what reportedly happened to at least a half million people.
A report from cybersecurity firm Avast, as reported by The Next Web, found that 29 models of trackers made by Chinese company Shenzhen i365 Tech had vulnerabilities that may have exposed the data of more than 600,000 users.
Each account was assigned an ID number and default password, which just happened to be “123456.” For more than 100,000 users, the exposed data included real-time location information. The report also claimed that design flaws in the trackers allowed “third-parties to ‘spoof’ (or fake) the user’s location, or access the microphone for eavesdropping.” Read more…
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Source : GPS trackers for kids exposed real-time location and had default password 123456