One user currently found out that Smart TVs aren't immune to ransomware
Security experts for years have been
warning consumers that smart TVs are a prime target for hackers. Aside
from the fact that sets with microphones and cameras can serve as excellent eavesdropping
devices, we’re now seeing connected TVs being hit with ransomware.
As Bleeping
Computer highlights,
software engineer Darren Cauthon recently posted a photo on Twitterof a
family member’s LG smart TV (model 50GA6400) that had been bricked by
Android malware. Based on the image, the publication believes the set was
infected with a version of the Cyber.Police ransomware, sometimes referred to
as FLocker, Frantic Locker or Dogspectus.
The set in
question is said to be one of the last models running Google TV before LG switched to webOS.
Cauthon said he originally purchased the set for himself before passing it
along to a family member.
The hacker demanded $500 to unlock the
set but Cauthon wasn’t going to pay. Instead, he attempted to reset the TV to
its factory condition but was unable to do so. He then reached out to LG for
help.
Rather than
instruct him on how to perform the factory reset, LG told him to take the set
to a local service center where he would be charged a whopping $340. At that
price, it’d probably be cheaper to buy a new TV outright.
LG ultimately
had a change of heart (likely due to the attention the story generated on
social media) and provided Cauthon with instructions on how to perform a
factory reset – a process he recorded and posted on YouTube.
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