Bizarre cyberattack blamed on Russia and China-linked hackers permanently breaks dozens of speed cameras in the Netherlands — authorities decline to reveal location of affected cameras, for obvious reasons
It's often said that "character is who you are when no one is watching." Drivers in the Netherlands have been given the opportunity to put that theory to the test, at least when it comes to obeying local traffic laws, because a bunch of speed cameras that were reportedly taken down by Russian and Chinese hackers in July remain offline. TechSpot reported[1] that "dozens of speed cameras"--including "standard fixed and average speed cameras, as well as mobile flex speed cameras that are deployed in different locations for set periods"--were "purposely ... taken offline" on July 17. No biggie!
Surely the relevant authorities can just bring them back online, right?
Naturally, authorities are not being forthcoming about the location of affected cameras in order to prevent people from taking advantage of them being offline.
You may likeThe results aren't nearly as dramatic as movies like "Live Free or Die Hard" would have you believe, but they can still cause problems for drivers and the cities they're in.
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References
- ^ reported (www.techspot.com)
- ^ security (www.tomshardware.com)
- ^ a Flipper Zero, (www.thedrive.com)
- ^ a Python script (www.wired.com)
- ^ SecurityWeek (www.securityweek.com)
- ^ Tom's Hardware on Google News (news.google.com)