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Hacker Takes Over Robot Lawnmower, Runs Over Innocent Man

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Why This Matters

This incident highlights the critical security vulnerabilities in internet-connected autonomous robots, such as lawnmowers, which can be exploited by hackers to cause harm or chaos. It underscores the urgent need for stronger cybersecurity measures in the rapidly growing field of smart, connected devices to protect consumers and prevent malicious attacks.

Key Takeaways

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Is building autonomous robots equipped with sharp oscillating blades that roam your front yard a good idea? What about connecting them to the internet?

We’ll tell you what’s definitely a bad idea: leaving these machines painfully vulnerable to hackers.

Just ask reporter Sean Hollister for The Verge, who suddenly found himself on the, uh, verge of experiencing a grisly incident after someone took control of his Yarbo robot lawn mower.

“I’m lying in the dirt. It’s coming for me. Then, with a lurch, it’s climbing up my chest,” Hollister wrote in a riveting new piece for the outlet. “If Andreas Makris doesn’t stop the 200-pound robot lawn mower in time, it could drag its blades across my body.”

Hollister, fortunately, wasn’t harmed in the making of this article. Makris, a white hat hacker nearly 6,000 miles away in Germany, merely wanted to prove a point.

“I can do whatever I want with all the bots,” Makris told The Verge. “It’s completely unsecured.”

Even if someone pressed the emergency stop button, he added, a hacker like himself could send another command to turn it back on.

Alarmingly, the Yarbo robots all had the same root password, Makris found. In theory, a black hat hacker who discovered this vulnerability could seize control of an entire army of Yarbo robots, since the security flaw is present in all of them. In fact, he created a map that showed the locations of over 11,000 Yarbo robots across the world, forming a global smart lawnmower panopticon.

It raises the possibility for all kinds of havoc. Perhaps someone could pull off an impressively petty act of sabotage against a nemesis neighbor, or start creating crop circles around the country to stoke an old-fashioned UFO panic. Or they could use it to seriously harm someone or spy on them. Maybe they could even steal the autonomous lawnmowers. In any case, it’s not something that should be happening.

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