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Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.
Windmills Tilted, Scared Cows Butchered, Lies Skewered on the Lance of Reality ... or something to that effect.
Monday, April 7, 2014
Family claim they are being terrorized by threatening messages from their cable box
An Indianapolis family claim they are being terrorized by a hacker who
has taken control of their cable box. For more than a week, personal and
harassing messages have been showing up on their TVs. Alana Meeks has
no idea who’s behind it. “This stuff is uncanny. I haven’t heard
anything like this in my life,” she said. “He says he’s a stalker.”
Meeks said it started more than a week ago - “he” or someone has taken
control of her AT&T cable box and typing messages on two of her TVs.
One said: ‘ISEEYOUHAHA’. Others threatened to hurt Alana’s 9-year-old
granddaughter, Aniya. “He wants to do more than hurt her,” said Meeks.
“He wants to have sex with her. Pervert.” An officer who stopped by saw
it himself, according to a police report. Meeks even tried covering her windows in case someone was watching.
It didn’t work. “If you want me, come get me,” she said. “You know
where I’m at, but you can’t have my grand baby.” “It’s astonishing. It’s
spooky because there aren’t a lot of ways you can get into someone’s
cable box,” said Fred Cate, research director for the Indiana
University Center for Applied Cybersecurity.
“The most common ways would be using a remote control, an infrared
device, but that’s line of sight. You usually have to be in the room or
within a close distance and clear vision to the box you’re changing the
channel on or doing the typing on.” Cate said an infrared repeater may
be another theory. The device is used primarily by homeowners trying to
hide their electronics or home theatre system from sight. The repeater
essentially converts infrared light coming from a remote control to an
electrical signal that can be easily distributed over electrical wiring
to one or more components.
“Whoever did this has had to have had physical access to the apartment
(or the area outside the apartment window) at some time or another,”
said Cate. “That access could have been as little as sticking an
LED-like bulb through a ceiling or wall or in a light fixture. The
LED-like bulb must have a power source; it has to be plugged in or have a
connected battery pack somewhere nearby.” AT&T released a
statement: “We take security seriously and we are working with the
customer to determine the cause and remedy of the situation.” Meeks
wants the hacker caught. “I want this [person] out of my life. I want
[this person] to go to jail,” she said. “That’s where [this person]
needs to be.”
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