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Hacked Miami road sign highlights password and physical security lapses

Takeaway: Vandals hacked a Miami-Dade county road sign to read “NO LATINOS.” Better physical and password security could have prevented the attack.

Digital vandals changed an electronic traffic sign on the Palmetto Expressway in Northwest Miami-Dade county to read “NO LATINOS NO TACOS.” According to NBCMiami.com, the sign was altered sometime early Tuesday morning. By 6 AM, the Florida Highway Patrol and a road crew were working to reset the sign’s message and had turned the sign away from the road.

This isn’t the first time someone has hacked the message on a highway sign. In January 2009, vandals in Austin, Texas changed a sign’s message to read “ZOMBIES AHEAD.”

Lax physical and poor password security

Both incidents should drive home the importance of two fundamental IT security measures–limiting physical access and changing a systems default administrative password.

According to I-hacked.com, road crews routinely fail to lock the access panel which protects a sign’s control pad. And even though the pads are often password protected, many people leave the system’s default admin password in place. And even if the password has been changed, digital miscreants may be able to reset the admin password back to the default with a few keystrokes.

Lax physical security, poor administration, and an easily resettable password made this highway signs an easy target.

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Bill Detwiler

About Bill Detwiler

Bill Detwiler is Head Technology Editor of TechRepublic. Previously, he worked as a Support Tech and IT Manager in the social research and energy industries.

Bill Detwiler

Bill Detwiler
Bill Detwiler is Head Technology Editor for TechRepublic. Previously he worked as a Technical Support Associate and Information Technology Manager in the social research and energy industries. Bill is a Microsoft Certified Professional with experience in Windows administration, data management, desktop support, and system security.

Bill Detwiler

Bill Detwiler
Bill Detwiler has nothing to disclose. He doesn't hold investments in the technology companies he covers.
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