So you’re walking outside, minding your own business, and then you pass by a random wall and notice a USB stick (might look built onto the wall or just loosely hanging on a corner). You can’t help but wonder; why is it here, why was I the one to find it, maybe I should try to find out its content… While it’s safe to wonder, you should just keep walking and forget about it instead. Here’s why lost or randomly placed memory sticks are dangerous:
Who can say for sure what exactly a basic memory stick can hold? Con artists nowadays utilize those, as they are getting increasingly more inventive, to take your information and damage your gadgets. In this article, you’ll discover what risk a tiny drive standing out of a random wall can present to your information and security, and why you must never ever take one off the wall.
Dead Drop is a worldwide workmanship project that acquired a few stunts from the universe of spies. These days, there are more than one and a half thousand dead drops all throughout the planet. This is a great chance to be reminded that it’s exceptionally not recommended to plug some arbitrary USB stick into your laptop. You seriously can’t imagine what data may be waiting for you, and the risk is just not worth it!
Criminals can utilize the lost memory sticks stunt to gain admittance to your own data, your passwords, and other significant information. Additionally, they can without much of a stretch annihilate your PC. USB sticks via the post office likewise contain malware that can truly wreck your device.
ADVERTISEMENT
Berlin-based craftsman Aram Bartholl chose to make “a mysterious, disconnected, distributed document sharing organization in broad daylight space” and began his Dead Drop project. It urges individuals to trade classified data with others by concealing memory sticks everywhere.
You never know what infections are prowling on a blaze drive off the road, standing by calmly to annihilate their next victim. Also, anybody can use it to download recordings, pictures, or text documents, and this alone is scary enough.
What’s even scarier is that some of these drives can literally destroy a laptop, using an assimilated power that can reach 240 volts.
Furthermore, besides the wall trick, malware-containing memory sticks are also being dropped into letter boxes. Con artists obviously depend on the spontaneous curiosity of humans and, believe it or not, it does pay off.
If you, at any point, see a USB stick on a wall or in any other mystery-spiking space, just keep walking! That’s not a good sign and not a little play by fate, it’s just not meant for you and it will likely end up doing you more harm than good.
ADVERTISEMENT
However, we must admit that the concept is pretty cool. What do you think?
ADVERTISEMENT





