Get the latest tech news

Department of War Doesn’t Defend its Web Streams From Hackers


The Pentagon publicly posts the stream keys to its Facebook, YouTube, and X channels, exposing livestreams to account takeovers.

The newly renamed Department of War has publicly posted the stream keys of its Facebook, X, and YouTube channels for years, potentially allowing hackers to hijack its official social media accounts and broadcast whatever they want. The Department of War, however, routinely posts stream keys on its Defense Visual Information Distribution Service (DVIDS) website, a portal hosting military videos and photos for media usage. More recently, the stream keys for the department’s X, YouTube, and Facebook accounts were posted in the hours leading up to a livestream of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth giving burgers to the the National Guard in Washington, D.C. in August.

Get the Android app

Or read this on r/technology

Read more on:

Photo of Hackers

Hackers

Photo of War

War

Photo of department

department

Related news:

News photo

Hackers hijack npm packages with 2 billion weekly downloads in supply chain attack

News photo

Hackers exploited Sitecore zero-day flaw to deploy backdoors

News photo

This Company Turns Dashcams into ‘Virtual CCTV Cameras.’ Then Hackers Got In | A hacker has compromised Nexar, which turns peoples' cars into "virtual CCTV cameras" that organizations can then buy images from.