Webcams
Webcams are essentially digital cameras that are connected to the Internet. They were developed in 1991 by Quentin Stafford-Fraser and Paul Jardetzky in order to monitor a coffee pot at the University of Cambridge and were connected to the Internet for the first time in 1993. Today, they are used ubiquitously throughout the world and can be seen in places like common households to corporate offices, where they are used for anything from personal communication to security purposes. Most webcams can be found embedded into an electronic device, such as a laptop or a phone, or as an auxiliary device that can be connected via a USB or FireWire port of a computer.[1]
Contents
Privacy Ethical Issues
It is not hard to deduce that you are being watched on the Internet, whether it be by online advertising companies, your internet provider, or even the National Security Agency. The realm of what activities can be seen through the Internet is not limited to the digital space, however, as there are devices like webcams that perceive your physical activities, where the Internet acts as an enabler. For hackers, the webcam is the perfect weapon with which non-consensual spying can be done, for reasons that are most commonly malicious. Since the beginning of the 2010s, instances in which webcams were hijacked by black-hat hackers have become so common that a term has been coined for this specific type of hacking: camfecting.[2] The topic of camfecting has even made it into popular media, with an array TV shows and movies covering the topic. Some of the most influential people in popular culture, especially in the area of tech, have also brought the topic to light. Hacking into a webcam in order to snap pictures from it, or even stream it live without the consent of the owner, is so easy that it is frightening. With the help of plug-ins, such as Meterpreter which is a dynamically extensible payload that uses in-memory DLL injection stagers, and access to Wi-Fi, one could easily take over a webcam even without much programming knowledge.[3] Although most computers now have protective mechanisms that hinder this kind of intrusion, it is still very possible to remotely hack into a webcam. Even Apple laptops, which are notorious for being difficult to hack into, have been shown to be vulnerable to a webcam attack by researchers at John’s Hopkin’s who showed that it’s possible to covertly capture images through iSight cameras on MacBooks and iMacs released prior to 2008.[4] As of now, it seems that the only measure that is 100% foolproof is covering the camera itself.[5] It is also widely believed that the National Securities Agency is able to and has turned on webcams and built-in microphones without triggering the indicator light.[6]
Outstanding Instances
In 2013, a student in Glasgow had her webcam compromised while watching a DVD in her bath. She brought the incident forward to BBC Radio 5, whose live investigation uncovered websites where hackers traded photos and footages captured, even selling them for profit.[7]
In 2014, a Russian website that had indexable live stream footages from baby cameras to personal webcams was uncovered. Each footage was labeled with which country it was from, and the specific location from which it was being broadcasted, and even ran advertisements on the page for monetization.[8]
In 2018, a hacker gained access to a baby monitor in Houston, where he then begin to spout “sexual expletives” and threats like “I’m going to kidnap your baby”. Similar instances were reported at different times from cities in South Carolina, Minnesota, and Arizona.[9]
References in Popular Culture
The prevalence of camfecting has inevitably led to popular culture media referencing this phenomenon. Perhaps one of the most prominent of these is the “Shut Up and Dance” episode of Black Mirror, Season 3. [SPOILER ALERTS] In this episode, the main protagonist becomes victim to camfecting while he is masturbating to pornography, which the hacker uses in order to blackmail him into doing a variety of activities, such as robbing a bank and even engaging in a fight to the death with a stranger.[10] At the end of the episode, the show raises a moral dilemma by revealing that the protagonist was actually viewing child pornography, making viewers ask the ethicality of humiliating someone via grey-hat, even borderline black-hat hacking.
Another widely watched TV show that covers camfecting is Mr. Robot, which is not surprising given that the whole premise of the TV show is about hacking. In episode 3, season 1 of the show, titles “eps1.2_d3bug.mkv”, one of the main character’s boyfriend has his webcam hacked into, where the hacker records him and tells him that he has photos of his mistress.[11] The hacker uses this as leverage, blackmailing the character into spreading malware into a company’s computer system. Apart from entertainment, some of the most influential people of this century, such as Mark Zuckerburg and FBI Director James Comey, are known to cover their webcams when they are not in use and are encouraging others to do the same.
References
- ↑ “What Is a Webcam?” Computer Hope
- ↑ “Camfecting” Wikipedia
- ↑ “About the Metasploit Meterpreter” Offensive Security
- ↑ “Camfecting” Wikipedia
- ↑ “How Hackers Can Watch You Via Webcam | ODS Cybersecurity Services” ODS - Cybersecurity
- ↑ “How to Keep the NSA From Spying Through Your Webcam” Kim Zetter
- ↑ “'Horrified' Girl Spied on in the Bath by Webcam Hackers” BBC News
- ↑ “Is Your Webcam Allowing Hackers to Peer into Your Home?” The Telegraph
- ↑ “'I'm in Your Baby's Room': A Hacker Took over a Baby Monitor and Broadcast Threats, Parents Say.” The Washington Post
- ↑ "Shut Up and Dance." Black Mirror
- ↑ "eps1.2_d3bug.mkv" Mr. Robot
Bibliography
- “'Horrified' Girl Spied on in the Bath by Webcam Hackers.” BBC News, BBC, 20 June 2013, www.bbc.com/news/av/technology-22986017/horrified-girl-spied-on-in-the-bath-by-webcam-hackers.
- “About the Metasploit Meterpreter.” Offensive Security, www.offensive-security.com/metasploit-unleashed/about-meterpreter/.
- “Camfecting.” Wikipedia, Wikimedia Foundation, 13 Jan. 2019, en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camfecting.
- "eps1.2_d3bug.mkv." Mr. Robot, season 1, episode 2, July 8, 2015. Amazon Prime Video.
- “How Hackers Can Watch You Via Webcam | ODS Cybersecurity Services.” ODS - Cybersecurity, 5 May 2017, opendatasecurity.io/hackers-can-watch-you-via-your-webcam/. Saltzman, Marc. www.usatoday.com/story/tech/columnist/saltzman/2018/03/01/has-someone-hacked-your-webcam-heres-how-stop-cyber-snoopers/377676002/. Sparkes, Matthew.
- “Is Your Webcam Allowing Hackers to Peer into Your Home?” The Telegraph, Telegraph Media Group, 20 Nov. 2014, www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/news/11242650/Is-your-webcam-allowing-hackers-to-peer-into-your-home.html. Wang, Amy B.
- “'I'm in Your Baby's Room': A Hacker Took over a Baby Monitor and Broadcast Threats, Parents Say.” The Washington Post, WP Company, 20 Dec. 2018, www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2018/12/20/nest-cam-baby-monitor-hacked-kidnap-threat-came-device-parents-say/.
- "Shut Up and Dance." Black Mirror, season 3, episode 3, October 21, 2016. Netflix.
- “What Is a Webcam?” Computer Hope, 3 Aug. 2018, www.computerhope.com/jargon/w/webcam.htm.
- Zetter, Kim. “How to Keep the NSA From Spying Through Your Webcam.” Wired, Conde Nast, 3 June 2017, www.wired.com/2014/03/webcams-mics/.