There are plenty of hacking devices on the market equal or worse than this. The truth is you want these devices available in the public so people are award of them and nerds can learn how to protect against them.
The malicious inclined wont care about legal availability and some tinkers will make them if not only for the technical challenge.
These sorts of tools and knowledge should be free and open, so people can test their own systems and learn how to defend against them. They aren’t inherently bad themselves. As with firearms, it’s all about what you do with it.
Hiding a potential exploit from the general public does them no good.
So the manufacturer isn’t spying on you, it just designed a product so someone else could hack you instead? That doesn’t make it sound any better.
The end result is the same: be careful what cables you plug into your device.
This is hak5. They make penetration testing Tools
Technically it’s O.MG; they work with and are sold through HAK 5, and license Ducky Script.
Yes, if someone used one of these against you, you could be in trouble. The company that makes it also makes a detector that can spot it:
https://shop.hak5.org/products/malicious-cable-detector-by-o-mg
There are plenty of hacking devices on the market equal or worse than this. The truth is you want these devices available in the public so people are award of them and nerds can learn how to protect against them.
The malicious inclined wont care about legal availability and some tinkers will make them if not only for the technical challenge.
These sorts of tools and knowledge should be free and open, so people can test their own systems and learn how to defend against them. They aren’t inherently bad themselves. As with firearms, it’s all about what you do with it.
Hiding a potential exploit from the general public does them no good.