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Being Hacked : Understanding Victims' Experiences of IoT Hacking

Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

From light bulbs to smart locks, IoT is increasingly embedded into our homes and lives. This opens up new vulnerabilities as IoT devices can be hacked and manipulated to cause harm or discomfort. In this paper we document users' experiences of having their IoT systems hacked through 210 self-reports from Reddit, device support forums, and Amazon review pages. These reports and the discussion around them show how uncertainty is at the heart of 'being hacked'. Hacks are sometimes difficult to detect, and users can mistake unusual IoT behaviour as evidence of a hack, yet this can still cause considerable emotional hurt and harm. In discussion, we shift from seeing hacks as technical system failings to be repaired, to seeing them as sites for care and user support. Such a shift in perspective opens a new front in designing for hacking - not just prevention but alleviating harm.<br />Funding details: Vetenskapsrådet, VR; Funding text 1: This research is partially funded by a Digital Futures postdoctoral research grant, and the Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsrådet) under the project Securing Things (2017-04804: Säkra saker: Säkra sakernas Internet).

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
Rostami, Asreen, Vigren, M., Raza, Shahid, Brown, B.
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1372242511
Document Type :
Electronic Resource