That 65-inch smart TV in your home can be more dangerous than you think. That’s according to a joint report from Bitdefender and Netgear, which found that the average smart home receives at least 29 attacks per day via connected devices. Streaming devices and TVs were the most vulnerable connected devices, accounting for 25.9% and 21.3% respectively of exposed devices examined by the two security companies. The report is based on threat intelligence from 6.1 million smart homes in the US, Australia, and Europe collected between January and October this year. The average smart home has 22 connected devices, according to the report. Sneak attack. Port scanning attacks, which occur when cybercriminals send packets to ports to determine server vulnerabilities, were the most common type of attack in the report’s analysis of 13 billion security events. Bogdan Botezatu, senior director of threat research and reporting at Bitdefender, told IT Brew that these attacks are used to determine what device they can target and how it could be compromised. “They will be able to identify devices this way, and they will be able to identify vulnerable services running on these devices,” Botezatu said. “If they want to exploit the device, they first need to understand what they’re dealing with.” Even the fridge isn’t safe.—BM |