scorecard
  1. Home
  2. tech
  3. Journalists covering the Trump-Kim summit were given free USB fans - but security experts warn they may be trojan horses full of malware

Journalists covering the Trump-Kim summit were given free USB fans - but security experts warn they may be trojan horses full of malware

Kif Leswing   

Journalists covering the Trump-Kim summit were given free USB fans - but security experts warn they may be trojan horses full of malware
Tech3 min read

Trump Kim summit

Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim-Jong Un.

  • Journalists at the Trump-Kim summit in Singapore were given free USB-powered fans as a gift.
  • Security experts say that anyone who plugs it in is at risk of getting hacked. 

Journalists covering the summit between President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim-Jong Un in Singapore were given a fun gift bag that included a water bottle, a trial to The Straits Times newspaper, and a tourism guide to the island where it's taking place.

It also included a tiny fan that plugs into a mini-USB port or iPhone lightning port for power, according to tweets from the historic event.

It could be a nice gesture from the hosts. As Dutch journalist Harald Doornbos wrote in a tweet about the fan, "it is pretty hot here in Singapore," according to a translation from the BBC

But security experts around the web warned that the fan might not just be a way to stay cool. It could be a trojan horse designed to steal data from any journalist who plugged the fan into their USB drive.

Anything that plugs into a USB port is potentially a way for an attacker to get malicious software onto your computer. It's how the notorious Stuxnet worm infected its targets, and many big companies worried about information security forbid their employees from plugging anything into a USB port.  

Twitter exploded with security experts telling journalists not to plug the fan in. It could install keylogger software, or hack their email, they warned: 

North Korea has become a hacking superpower in recent years, according to The Wall Street Journal. The country has been linked to attacks like the "Wannacry" ransomware. But North Korea has denied responsibility for the fan, according to the BBC.

Of course, the USB fan could just be that - a way to stay cool at a hot summit. But it's probably not worth the risk to find out. 

READ MORE ARTICLES ON


Advertisement

Advertisement