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Sneaky Bandwidth Consumers in Your Home

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Slow internet is one of those annoyances that creeps up on you. You sign up for a plan that should handle streaming, gaming, and video calls with ease, but somehow your connection still feels sluggish at the worst times. Before you assume your provider is the problem, take a look closer to home. Sneaky bandwidth consumers could be hogging more of your internet than you realize. Even if you’ve upgraded to better internet services in Colorado or elsewhere, these hidden culprits can drag your connection down without warning.

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Kellyanne Conway Isn’t as Crazy as You Think With That Microwave Comment

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Michael Price
Mar 16, 2017

In case you’re wondering, microwaves can’t take pictures of you. For starters, they don’t have cameras. But—and I can’t believe I’m writing this—Kellyanne Conway earlier this week was right to raise concerns about the security of “smart” devices connected to the Internet, even if it was an attempt to distract from President Trump’s unsubstantiated claim that President Obama had “wiretapped” Trump Tower.

Had Conway said she was worried about her dishwasher instead of her microwave, she might’ve been on to something. Back in 2012, a Wired headline read, “CIA Chief: We’ll Spy On You Through Your Dishwasher,” describing the clandestine agency’s very real plans to hack the “Internet of Things.” And as we now know, the CIA did find a way to turn Samsung “smart” TVs into covert listening devices.

In fact, the proliferation of Internet-connected devices with poor security is a major problem for at least a few reasons. First, they are indeed capable of exposing personal information—which is precisely why the CIA did it. The words we say in front of the TV are, to put it mildly, quite different from the words we would use on TV. And other “smart” home devices, from thermostats to baby monitors to Wi-Fi-enabled light bulbs, are also vulnerable to hacking.

https://fortune.com/2017/03/16/kellyanne-conway-microwave-hacking/