South Korea’s military has been forced to remove over 1,300 surveillance cameras from its bases after learning that they could be used to transmit signals to China, South Korean news agency Yonhap reported.

The cameras, which were supplied by a South Korean company, “were found to be designed to be able to transmit recorded footage externally by connecting to a specific Chinese server,” the outlet reported an unnamed military official as saying.

Korean intelligence agencies discovered the cameras’ Chinese origins in July during an examination of military equipment, the outlet said.

  • Noble Shift@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    What happens when infosec is an afterthought, brought to you by management, almost always by management. Most of my gigs throughout my career have been because of this (infosec guy).

    The rest of my career has been when management is throwing money at the problem(s), usually right after an incident. Sometimes you get lucky and it’s in response to some other entities incident.

    Last minute improbable solutions to other people’s long term impossible problems.

    • interurbain1er@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      I remember when, I think, Sony was hacked because of the movie « the interview ». It created enough of a news cycle shitstorm that our corporate overlords became excessively generous with our infosec budget and made it a tier 1 priority.

      It went for measly .5% to a whooping 25% of IT expenditure.

      On the other hand to really show they didn’t understand anything about it they recruited an experienced CISO and fired him a month later because an accountant’s workstation was hit by a ransomware. The guy barely had the time to start building a plan and launch a bunch of audit but still got the full blame for decades of neglects. (He eventually sued them and settled).