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11 November 19, 11:39
(This post was last modified: 11 November 19, 11:39 by harlan4096.)
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Dozens of devices, More than 6 kilometers of cables, and a Faraday Cage give researchers a new place to crack open the IoT
Avast has opened its Internet of Things Lab in the lobby of the company’s headquarters in Prague, the capital of the Czech Republic. With dozens of devices, 30 Wi-Fi routers, three 3-D printers, 100 outlets, and 6 kilometers of cables, the lab provides visitors with insights into IoT technologies while giving researchers and analysts a new state-of-the-art facility for their everyday IoT research.
The lab includes a Faraday Cage used for radio frequency experiments that few labs in the world can do because it is illegal to submit signals that could interfere with broadcast, government, and military networks. Avast uses the Faraday Cage, a steel-walled room that blocks electromagnetic signals from coming in or out, to make sure no signals interfere with public frequencies.
Visitors of the Avast IoT Lab can also see the Avast Omni, a new network-based consumer security product currently available in the US, which protects devices at home and on-the-go. Omni blocks malware samples uploaded to vulnerable IoT devices, and blocks and suspends infected IoT devices being used as a bot.
The IoT Lab is the labor of love of Vladislav Iliushin and Marko Žbirka, IoT threat researchers at Avast. “It took a year to pull this lab together, and we’re excited to get to expand our work in this key area of cybersecurity where consumers need protection,” Iliushin said.
The facility is a place where researchers can crack open innocuous devices consumers might not realize are a cybersecurity threat, such as an internet-connected coffee maker on display that Avast researchers hacked remotely to turn into a ransomware machine.
At an extensive hardware workbench researchers can dissect hardware with soldering tools and a high-powered microscope. Iliushin said the hardware workplace surprises some visitors, but it is part of a holistic approach to cybersecurity that must address the entire IoT cybercrime world. “A lot of people ask us why do we need the IoT Lab and all the hardware. The answer is simple: Bad guys don’t care if we’re a software company doing security. They use any tools to find vulnerabilities in devices, and we will use all tools and means necessary to stop them. ”
At the other end of the spectrum from the hardware workbench is super-fast internet to streamline research. A 10-gigabyte-per-second connection can download large data sets in seconds rather than minutes, giving researchers much-needed response time when working to stop a threat. A server room that replicates an entire neighborhood of smart homes also gives the researchers insight into the real world of IoT. “We have put a lot of thought into the design of our server room, where we can connect about 100 physical Smart Home networks with different devices on them and then run different kinds of experiments,” Žbirka said.
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