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Drones now spies?

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Phill

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SECURITY
Chinese drones may be spies: US intelligence agency warning
Jamie Seidel, News Corp Australia Network
May 21, 2019 12:58pm
First it was Huawei phones. Now it’s Chinese drones. The US Department of Homeland Security has issued a warning that our little spies in the sky may be double-agents.
It says they are being used to deliver ‘spyware’ to networks and redirect sensitive data.
An overnight alert from DHS’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency states drones are a “potential risk to an organisation’s information” because they can “contain components that can compromise your data and share your information on a server accessed beyond the company itself.”
Unlike black-listed Chinese phone and telecommunications company Huawei, no specific manufacturer has been named. But China is the world’s largest manufacturer of hobbyist, commercial — and military — drones.
Foreign intelligence agencies could identify drones operating in sensitive areas, experts warn. The cameras on these drones — be they nearby hobbyists, security services or even maintenance assessors — can be accessed. But they could also be used to deliver ‘spyware’ into sensitive networks.
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A drone photographs young woman relaxing on tropical beach in the Philippines. Such privacy concerns are now extending to national security. Picture: iStock
“The United States government has strong concerns about any technology product that takes American data into the territory of an authoritarian state that permits its intelligence services to have unfettered access to that data or otherwise abuses that access,” the alert says.
“Those concerns apply with equal force to certain Chinese-made (unmanned aircraft systems)-connected devices capable of collecting and transferring potentially revealing data about their operations and the individuals and entities operating them, as China imposes unusually stringent obligations on its citizens to support national intelligence activities.”
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The alert warns: “They can contain components that can compromise your data and share your information on a server accessed beyond the company itself. Other concerns are that an organisation is susceptible to data theft if the drone is transmitting unencrypted data or, more broadly, that a drone could increase the risk of a network being breached.”
The DHS has ordered drone users — particularly those who provide services that may affect ‘critical national functions’ — to “be cautious when purchasing” drones from China, and to take precautionary steps like turning off the device’s internet connection and removing secure digital cards”. It also warns users to “understand how to properly operate and limit your device’s access to networks (and prevent) theft of information.”
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The HMB Endeavour photographed by drone at a dock in Nouma. Drone photos and video from sensitive areas could be being redirected to China. Picture: Toby Zerna
It’s not the first time high-tech equipment has been accused of redirecting senstive material back to the government of its manufacturers. In 2017, Norway accused the US of accessing flight data collected by its newly delivered F-35 strike fighters.
It’s also not the first time the US has issued an alert about Chinese drones.
In 2017, the US Army ordered all Chinese-made drones be recalled from its ranks to be destroyed. It alleged they had provided the means for intelligence operatives to access infrastructure and operational data.
According to Reuters, the Chinese firm DJI has issued a statement saying “the security of our technology has been independently verified by the US government and leading US businesses.” It also says users have control over how data is collected, stored and transmitted.
 
Right here on the front page: Are We Helping China Spy On Us By Using DJI Drones?

From several hours earlier in the News section: Oh boy... we are all flying spy drones!
Oh boy... we are all flying spy drones!

And here: DHS warns of 'strong concerns' that Chinese-made drones are stealing data
DHS warns of 'strong concerns' that Chinese-made drones are stealing data
 
Right here on the front page: Are We Helping China Spy On Us By Using DJI Drones?

From several hours earlier in the News section: Oh boy... we are all flying spy drones!
Oh boy... we are all flying spy drones!

Just hit the local paper here so I thought I'd post.
 
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Thank you for your contribution but this topic is going over in a pre-existing thread located at:

Let's continue the discussion in that thread.

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