By Anonymous CowardPosted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:21 GMT
I *KNEW* that the toaster was looking at me funny this morning. The damn thing is conspiring with the microwave for control of the freezer. Thankfully the Lean Green Milling Machine is on a separate subnet and hasn't found them yet.
I'm not sure about the radio alarm either. I'm sure it laughs when it wakes me.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:28 GMT
This is the funniest thing i have read today.
Will this man be responsible for the first cylon war? the toasters take over the world, lol.
Well done to him, i think this is a briilaint extrapolation on the the dangers of making everything reliant on networking solutions.... heck thats how the cylons nuked the 12 colonies in the first place (In battlestar galatica for those who think i have gone mad)
Pause for thought? Naa but hacking a network with a kettle might be another cool invention, wonder if you could get the uber hacker kitchen set "for the serious hacker, hacking comes before coffee and toast" lol
By Liam JohnsonPosted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:37 GMT
>>If an appliance or home device comes as a gift
But how can you be sure your mother didn't buy it from a dodgy dealer??
The only way to be sure is to pop out the microcontroller and reverse engineer a new one built from discrete parts, preferably valves, so you can look inside to make sure nobody has bugged it.
By Scott EvilPosted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:59 GMT
So remote access is the key function to a networked Kitchen?
Pre plan your cooking,assuming the food is in place ready to be cooked...
I wonder if we can network our minds so we dont even have to leave the house at some point in the future,we can work from home!!!! WOW!!! or not........
By StevePosted Tuesday 18th December 2007 14:15 GMT
Wtf do you need a networked toaster for in the first place? Does it send you an email when the bread is finished browning? anyone who buys one of these in the first place deserves to be hacked!
By John MilesPosted Tuesday 18th December 2007 14:59 GMT
Isn't it obvious the advantages – it can download and burn images of the latest miracle onto the toast, thus making the ability to sell at a profit on fleabay
Either that or just a way for the manufacturers to charge £50 for a £5 pound piece of hardware
By Hayden ClarkPosted Tuesday 18th December 2007 16:46 GMT
.. what we might worry about is the various LAN-connected toys you can get. Networked media players, Home NAS boxes, that new Western Digital thingie that lets you share content over t' internet - they're all fairly sophisticated IP hosts that could potentially launch an attack against PCs on your LAN.
You're trusting that the authors of the firmware were just trying to make the product work......
By Anonymous CowardPosted Tuesday 18th December 2007 16:55 GMT
The appliances are advancing their true plan. To gain access to the bathroom and throw themselves into the tub while innocent civillians relax inside of it. We cannot let these terrorists operate, we must strike for the free peoples of the world, and defend ourselves against those that would do us harm!
-Future White House response to Appliance wars, and suicide shorting.
By Rick BraschePosted Tuesday 18th December 2007 17:31 GMT
with a name like "Dror Shalev" you're already half way to becoming an evil cybernetic overlord. Sounds vaguely similar to that guy that created the Daleks...
By Dave HarrisPosted Tuesday 18th December 2007 17:42 GMT
The toaster wants internet access so it can find out the day's weather and burn in an appropriate image. See http://www.theregister.co.uk/2001/06/04/bread_as_a_display_device/
By Edward PearsonPosted Tuesday 18th December 2007 18:03 GMT
Don't get me wrong. I love technology, in all its shapes and forms.
However, when we as a society end up in a situation where we've spend time, money on effort on producing a "networked toaster", then somthing is seriously wrong.
Apart from the obvious "to show off a SecCons", what on Earth would you do with a networked toaster? Does your toaster need to communicate with your iPod? Do we really need a text message telling us that those crumpets are ready? Will these toasters support IPv6? Will we have to spend $500 in licensing fees for the "Ultimate" toasting experiance?
My advice, spend more money on renewable energy sources, if only to power my fully WiFi enabled kitchen sink. I've just installed the Reporting Server and I think my lights are dimmer, what with its new DRM capabilities eating all the power.
Comments on: Man uses networked 'crazy' toaster to hack PC
Talkie the toaster #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:14 GMT
Networked Kitchen #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:21 GMT
Cylons Are coming ;) #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:28 GMT
Its... #
By David Adams Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:28 GMT
RE: Networked Kitchen #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:35 GMT
Noone is safe #
By Liam Johnson Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:37 GMT
"Hello Toast Operator..." #
By Damian Gabriel Moran Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:49 GMT
@AC #
By Christopher Webb Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:51 GMT
Erm...? #
By Edward Rose Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:55 GMT
networked toaster #
By Kris Chaplin Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:58 GMT
omg #
By Scott Evil Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 13:59 GMT
play with fire #
By Daniel Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 14:05 GMT
Networked Appliances? #
By Steve Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 14:15 GMT
Easy to avoid this danger #
By Colin Millar Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 14:49 GMT
chinese junk #
By DeFex Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 14:57 GMT
Already happening! #
By jrroark Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 14:57 GMT
Why Network toaster #
By John Miles Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 14:59 GMT
punchbread? #
By Shaun Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 15:19 GMT
@Steve #
By Phil Endecott Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 16:02 GMT
Tomorrow People #
By DirkGently Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 16:29 GMT
The toaster is just an example... #
By Hayden Clark Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 16:46 GMT
The end is near! #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 16:55 GMT
Everyone would hate Microsoft toasters, #
By Anonymous John Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 17:22 GMT
it's almost cliche #
By Rick Brasche Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 17:31 GMT
Coming Soon...! #
By Mike Moyle Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 17:32 GMT
The toaster wants network access because... #
By Dave Harris Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 17:42 GMT
Re: toaster #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 17:51 GMT
This is where I begin to get annoyed. #
By Edward Pearson Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 18:03 GMT
Toast Control Protocol? #
By Chris Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 18:58 GMT
The next predator #
By Scott Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 19:00 GMT
Now that we have the important questions about security out the way #
By Tom Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 19:01 GMT
Toaster security is simple #
By Charles Manning Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 19:36 GMT
@TCP #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 20:32 GMT
Good posts #
By Michael Wood Posted Tuesday 18th December 2007 22:02 GMT
yeah, like i really need a title #
By Matt Posted Wednesday 19th December 2007 01:05 GMT
Apparently the upgrade..... #
By Joe Posted Wednesday 19th December 2007 07:19 GMT
Marshall Smith wasnt far off #
By Martin Harris Posted Wednesday 19th December 2007 07:46 GMT
I saw a loaf of bread on the shelves and thought of you #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Wednesday 19th December 2007 11:09 GMT
Has your boss gone yet? #
By Chris Posted Wednesday 19th December 2007 22:09 GMT