Over the weekend, Kellyanne Conway talked some nonsense about microwaves. Which has put us in the unfortunate position of defending her nonsense.
"There was an article this week that talked about how you can surveil someone through their phone, through their television sets, any number of different ways, microwaves that turn into cameras," she told The Bergen Record."That's just a fact of modern life."
SEE ALSO:Kellyanne Conway makes mistakes, just like the Oscars, says Kellyanne ConwayThe internet was swift to lol at Ms. Conway, who very clearly doesn't understand how technology works. There's no joy in defending her—recall that, as Trump's mouthpiece and de facto spokeslizard, she once invented a massacre and blamed refugees for it. And yet: while Conway's view on microwaves is both wildly ignorant and comically paranoid (no, they can't "turn into cameras"), her comment does carve out a piece of a much larger pie that we're all too happy to dine on.
Tweet may have been deleted
It was only a week ago when WikiLeaks dumped a trove of unverified documents that (among other things) alleged that the CIA could spy on people through their Samsung smart TVs. And every news outlet wrote an explainer piggybacking on this "news," with headlines built for the Salinger-backpocketers and tin foil hat enthusiasts in all of us: "How to know if your smart TV can spy on you." And so on. And this same cycle's playing out about microwaves right now, of course.
Those stories were built on a faulty premise. As we explained, while WikiLeaks did in fact reveal an alleged hack that the CIA could use to bug smart TVs, they were very specificSamsung smart TVs, and required an agent to have physical accessto the device's USB port. Oh, and also? Samsung says it patched the security flaw already.
Still, the story—usually devoid of context and packaged for maximum viral impact on Facebook—exploded. Wired, even in admitting that the hack was almost certainly irrelevant to the vastmajority of Samsung TV owners, published an entire article about how to check if the CIA has compromised your television.
People shared it thousands of times on social media, according to CrowdTangle, an analytics tool:

(In fairness, Mashable's initial story wasn't exactly gentle, with the headline "WikiLeaks document dump alleges the CIA can hack almost everything.")
No one said anything about microwaves, but the implication of all this was clear: If you have a device that's connected to the internet, evil spies can hack into them and steal your precious data.
This is a genuinely important topic and a conversation worth having. As cybersecurity expert Bruce Schnier explained in a New York magazine piece earlier this year, the "internet of things" represents a major security crisis for a whole mess of reasons. Internet-connected gadgets can be hacked and leveraged for "denial of service" attacks of the sort that pummeled major sites across the Web last fall. And yeah, they can absolutely expose your personal information.
SEE ALSO:These adorable teddy bears were reportedly hacked to expose 2 million messagesKellyanne Conway, who speaks inelegantly and lies constantly, made a stupid comment about microwaves, and she did so in defense of her boss' outlandish claims that his beautiful Trump Tower had been bugged by the government. None of this is working in her favor.
But our rush to 👏 drag👏herhas basically resulted in a mess of hypocrisy that makes important writing about cybersecurity seem less credible, in retrospect. It also makes some of us look like sharks—a bit too eager to bite when there's blood in the water.
The spirit of what Conway said was actually on the money, for once. Per the usual, she just kind of crapped out on the details. We can't let what's missing from the message, here—or even the messenger, as routinely misguided as this one may be—stop us from having a smart, informed conversation about the "internet of things" and what it means for the future of our privacy.
TopicsCybersecurityDonald Trump
(责任编辑:百科)
Tyler, the Creator helped Frank Ocean celebrate 'Blonde' release in a delicious way
Saturday's Fat Bear Week voting pits a bully against a chunky favorite
The 10 alien species we'd most like to invade Earth right now
This clip of Prince Harry laughing at Meghan Markle will make you love them even more
Tourist survives for month in frozen New Zealand wilderness after partner diesAustralian football makes history with first LGBT Pride Game
The rainbow flag took over Melbourne's Etihad Stadium Saturday night in a powerful statement of acce
...[详细]
Warning: major spoilers for the new Halloweenlie ahead.If you love something... Let. It. Go. In the
...[详细]Samsung A9 has four rear cameras
The first-ever smartphone with four rear cameras is here. On Thursday, Samsung has officially unveil
...[详细]'Will and Grace' #MeToo episode takes on oblivious bystanders
In December of last year, two months after the Harvey Weinstein exposé, Matt Damon made the p
...[详细]What brands need to know about virtual reality
Virtual reality (VR) is all the rage. Premium publishers like USA Today, the New York Times, and AOL
...[详细]Facebook really needs more people to watch Stories in its main app
The future of Facebook is Stories.That was one of the biggest takeaways from Facebook's third-quarte
...[详细]
Mondo, the Austin-based boutique art house behind so many amazing limited edition pop culture poster
...[详细]Watch a mob of golf spectators swarm Tiger Woods as he clinches first win in five years
Tiger Woods, arguably the greatest golfer ever, tasted victory on the PGA Tour for the first time in
...[详细]Tyler, the Creator helped Frank Ocean celebrate 'Blonde' release in a delicious way
The release of Frank Ocean's。 Blonde
。is a cause for celebration to the fans who waited four years fo
...[详细]Smart Replies constitute ten percent of all emails sent on Gmail
This summer, Gmail's billion-plus users received a new chill-but-efficient way to answer emails: Sma
...[详细]