zondag 1 februari 2015

Aerial Robots


Anoniem heeft een nieuwe reactie op je bericht "American Sniper 6" achtergelaten: 

The US Military Is Building Gangs of Autonomous Flying War Bots 

Hacking is yet again taking to the skies in 2015. An India-based Citrix security engineer has just figured out how to hack into a Parrot drone and install malware on it. This is, despite what other reports claim, not the first time this has been done. But what makes the malware, dubbed Maldrone, different is that it is designed to work across drone types. [..] But Sasi wanted to see what would happen if malware could trick the “autonomous decision-making units” of aerial robots. He is also keen to show the malware is cross-compatible with other drones. That’s why he’s also trying it out on a DJI Phantom. And he wants to make it as stealthy as possible. “[Where could] professional drone malware hide?” he asked. “[The] best place to operate is to sniff drone sensor communication.”

Maldrone: Watch Malware 





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