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Watch This Russian Hacker Break Into Our Computer In Minutes | CNBC

Mikhail Sosonkin, who works for cybersecurity start-up Synack, showed CNBC firsthand how easy it is to break into a computer. ยป Subscribe to CNBC: http://cnb.cx/SubscribeCNBC About CNBC: From 'Wall Street' to 'Main Street' to award winning original documentaries and Reality TV series, CNBC has you covered. Experience special sneak peeks of your favorite shows, exclusive video and more. Connect with CNBC News Online Get the latest news: http://www.cnbc.com/ Find CNBC News on Facebook: http://cnb.cx/LikeCNBC Follow CNBC News on Twitter: http://cnb.cx/FollowCNBC Follow CNBC News on Google+: http://cnb.cx/PlusCNBC Follow CNBC News on Instagram: http://cnb.cx/InstagramCNBC Watch This Russian Hacker Break Into Our Computer In Minutes | CNBC

CNBC

6 years ago

So I am joined here by Mikhail Sosonkin from Cenac You're gonna show how easy it is to hack into a computer so this is my personal computer. So in this attack we will pretend to be a wireless access point that you normally connect to let's say in a hotel so if you go in there and you try to log into something called Four Seasons guest Okay As you expect the wifi is around you'd want to be able to connect to it and a person who just arrived will think I'm a guest I should connect to the guest net
work Sure So now if you go to a website that you would normally use like Yelp.com. Okay And you know normally what happens when you go to a website just after you've logged into a hotel network it says, "oh please log in you're a new user" So here it's asking for your room number and last name which you'd normally do and actually I can see your information show up here and so part of the attack is that it makes you it tries to convince you that you need to do an update, you know, your machine is
out of date and it's one of those so you'd want to click on the download button because it's convincing you to do this and once you have executed that's it you already have been exploited. I can see it here it says, I can use this Macbook Let's say if I want to take a screenshot off your webcam so I have a special command here for essentially accessing your little camera right here If I say execute there we go. I just saw a green light pop up there for a second For a second, but now it's alread
y too late now I already know what's going on around you Oh wow This particular attack is recording as a picture but you can actually record video You can also record sound if you wanted to That's really disturbing You can execute things on the behalf so what I'm going to try to do is actually open the calculator application. Okay. Here we go. There's my calculator it just popped up. I can basically execute any types of commands I want on your behalf. So what can people do to protect themselves?
You should sort of be on the lookout for any time you sort of do an action and then the computer asks you to do something on your behalf. You downloaded something and it says, "hey please enter your password" If you didn't expect that to happen maybe you should kind of stand back a little bit and say well does it normally happen when I log into a wifi access point? Or if you're logging into a network and you didn't expect to be redirected to an update page you should kind of stand back a little
bit and say actually I'm not going to download this until I go home and I can trust my wifi. Well thank you so much great to see this. Glad to have the opportunity to hack your machine. Hey there, thanks for checking out CNBC on YouTube be sure to subscribe to stay up-to-date on all of the day's biggest stories you can also click on any of the videos around me to watch the latest from CNBC thanks for watching

Comments

@abhigyanshrivastava1255

Woman : does everything hacker says Woman : OMG! I'm hacked!

@chrswlf2657

He protecc He attacc But most importantly He open her calculator app

@tonyblack3401

Being Russian makes the hacking twice as dangerous.

@scallywag1337

Basically to "get hacked in minutes" you just have to do the things you never would. Makes total sense actually.

@unFamous_o.O

This kind of hacking will works for a guy who just download anything pops up.

@ugx7td5

Plot twist: The hacking software has never been removed.

@arekr.8100

"Breaks into our computer" Yes but the victim has to first login to random network and fall for multiple red flags lol

@AZTechLabs

Love how he doesn't tell anyone to disable remote scripting.

@theshubhamaditya

Hacker : Russian Interviewer : Indian Company : American Hotel : Trivago

@alphabee8171

She's probably worried late in the night if it's still accessible ๐Ÿ˜‚

@mmacity1830

She's on Apple the most secure device out there and will send out multiple pop ups before your device is compromised like demonstrated in the video, the only reason he was able to access her device is because she wanted it to be hacked.

@imma5269

This is an incredibly simple man in the middle attack. You could teach a 14 year old nerd to do this in a span of 1hr max. Very impressive lmao Edit: as someone (correctly) pointed out in the replies, this comment isnโ€™t entirely fair. These attacks are easy to execute if you use prewritten scripts & tools. Doing it all yourself is a different story. Overall, Iโ€™m glad they published this story. The public needs to be aware of this stuff b/c it will only become more and more important as time goes on

@faktamerapu7743

This is fake. He was not punching random keys and said "we are in!"

@leroy7039

In Russia, you don't hack computers Computers hack you

@connormccartney2953

'Hacker' proceeds to just inject a rat into an application and distribute it

@perjuryoffendermeghanmarkl6017

He sounds so happy:"so glad to have the opportunity to hack your machine." His happy voice just raised tone. He got so much joy just to hack a "machine"

@aj1379

"A website you normally use like Yelp" Yeah right

@JohnSmith-lw6mq

Lol, hacks that were popular 15 years ago, good reporting CNBC

@novocaine88

Wow, that os update looked so legit. You'd deserve it if you feel for that tbh...

@vishnuprasanth4725

I'm just concerned for my family, they just click yes for every popup