I have also been insecure since then https://t.co/bbRrnSWevI
— Ed Zitron (@edzitron) August 16, 2019
So, apparently there's a new Bluetooth flaw called "KNOB"https://t.co/By5Z9OtbXD pic.twitter.com/6zZrbrd7ag
— Graham Cluley (@gcluley) August 14, 2019
I wish for the days when we didn't hype the shit out of vulnerabilities https://t.co/6XI1EySH4R pic.twitter.com/lkRpE5c1yO
— Daniel Cuthbert (@dcuthbert) August 16, 2019
Raise your hand if you've also been broken and insecure for the last 20 years https://t.co/jEIlMCebpN
— sroo weeks notice (@gatsbysghost) August 16, 2019
Betrayed by the viking king product.*
— Crypti-Calli (@Iwillleavenow) August 16, 2019
*This is a joke about Bluetooth vulnerabilities and not the title of a Harlequin romance, as far as I know.https://t.co/WumbVaTmPW
Oh my: the Bluetooth protocol has been insecure since version 1.0; a malicious device can intercept and inject messages into any Bluetooth connection between basically any two devices. It was so bad they took a year to disclose after coordinating worldwide https://t.co/Mtg3C5O1jq
— Laurie Voss (@seldo) August 16, 2019
New Bluetooth KNOB Flaw Lets Attackers Manipulate Traffic
— pry0cc (@pry0cc) August 14, 2019
Interesting name for sure, what I find is scary is that encryption keys (when “secure”) is still only 7 octets.
What can we do with some badass computing power? https://t.co/47OsxReVhR
A newly disclosed vulnerability (CVE-2019-9506) in the Bluetooth Core Specification can be exploited by attackers to intercept and manipulate Bluetooth communications/traffic between two vulnerable devices. Researchers Daniele Anton... https://t.co/z14oZy01AI via @InfoSecHotSpot pic.twitter.com/fk0GCSdfAf
— Sean Harris (@InfoSecHotSpot) August 16, 2019
Bluetooth vulnerability could expose device data to hackers https://t.co/idQsyEw1le pic.twitter.com/6qwoXUhwYZ
— The Verge (@verge) August 16, 2019
Serious Bluetooth flaw leaves devices open to attack https://t.co/kBMQ5X9CnY#Cybersecurity #cybercrime #cyberattacks #hacker #hack #breach #phishing #dos #ransomware #malware #virus #apt #pii #nist #fcc #finra #hipaa #pci pic.twitter.com/IspKpmxxTV
— Rich Tehrani (@rtehrani) August 16, 2019
Critical KNOB exploit penetrates gaping Bluetooth vulnerability https://t.co/zXgUPo5nPs
— TNW (@thenextweb) August 16, 2019
Serious Bluetooth security flaw officially acknowledged; now patched by Applehttps://t.co/on2g2i6exa
— Chris Parker (@chrispcritters) August 16, 2019
Bluetooth vulnerability could expose device data to hackers https://t.co/eqESThz3g4
— The Cyber Security Hub (@TheCyberSecHub) August 17, 2019
#Bluetooth #vulnerability could expose device data to #hackers - The Verge #MobileSecurity #cyberthreats https://t.co/6FyoHA8SGM
— Sophie Tacchi (@SophTac) August 17, 2019
#Bluetooth vulnerability could expose device data to #hackers https://t.co/rP6K9flePq | .@jake_k .@verge #dataprivacy #databreach #lawtwitter pic.twitter.com/qPhzCzZULO
— Tom Martin (@lawdroid) August 17, 2019
Bluetooth vulnerability could expose device data to hackers @verge @jake_k https://t.co/REFlvOE5X7
— Evan Kirstel (@evankirstel) August 16, 2019
Critical KNOB exploit penetrates gaping Bluetooth vulnerability https://t.co/lM6glI2lbp
— TNW (@thenextweb) August 17, 2019
Critical KNOB exploit penetrates gaping Bluetooth vulnerability https://t.co/vTAJtbHrva
— TNW (@thenextweb) August 16, 2019