• North Korea tests US cyber vulnerabilities
  • Authentication, encryption and the padlock on your browser (9:40)
  • Implementation of guidelines to protect US critical infrastructure (22:40)
  • Hackers attacking hospitals, cars and pacemakers – sometimes for profit (30:48)

In the third episode of CYBER24, we sit down get a look at the security risks of IoT – or the Internet of Things. Think of it as everything that doesn’t really look like a computer, tablet or smartphone that still connects to the internet. The list includes everything from printers to refrigerators, to thermostats and doorbells, to cars and pacemakers.

Hays Companies is a proud sponsor of CYBER24

Everyday our world becomes more and more dependent on our connection to one another via the Internet. Today, there are approximately 11 billion devices connect to the Internet. The figure is expected to nearly triple to 30 billion in just the next two years… then triple again to 80 billion five years later.

In our discussion with Mike Nelson, vice president of IoT security at Digicert, Utah’s largest tech firm, we discuss some basic but important elements of security like encryption, authentication, certification and verification. We also talk about steps being taken by the US government to protect critical infrastructure and share some frightening stories about the kinds of things hackers can hack that you have probably never thought about.

You can subscribe and listen to this and previous episodes of CYBER24 HERE.

And here’s the video we discussed in the final segments of the guys who figured out how to hack into a Jeep from a remote location.