Have to get up in less than 6 hours :|
@matigo I can summarize most of those articles as follows:
The people who develop IoT devices, for the most part, do not adequately understand security. The people who buy these devices generally don't understand security either, and don't care to. The people who do care and could do something about it are in the minority. They are also, for the most part, not in a position to do anything about it.
The reality is: until something happens that turns those theoretical and very plausible threats into something that actually has catastrophic impact, the situation is unlikely to get measurably better.
@jextxadore even more than that: nitro brewed. Starbucks will not serve a Venti Nitro-Brew because too much caffeine.
// @literary
@JeremyCherfas don't feel bad, I feel underpowered too. I usually just look at someone's code (in whatever language), get a feel for how easy it is to tweak, and dive in. I realize that's not a terribly helpful approach, but it allows me to focus on the problem I'm trying to solve rather than learning the specific tools until I need to do that.
@literary there's nothing that says you can't make their job harder, though. :P
That said, I know all too well that you can't make people care about security that don't have a reason to.
// @lukasros
@skematica pnut.io/invite, use code 7nTQn67xjbFcjtcNJj7M. You will need to verify your email address before posting. Also, apps available are listed here: https://pnut.io/apps
// @cano