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Hacker Takes Over Couple's Smart Home, Plays Vulgar Music And Raises Temperature to 90 Degrees

"My heart was racing. I felt so violated at that point," says Samantha Westmoreland, whose Google Nest system was apparently hacked.

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Smart-home technology allows residents to remotely control everything from the lighting to the thermostat, and see who's ringing their doorbell. While it's often touted as a means to keep homes secure, a Milwaukee couple say they felt anything but safe after a hacker took over their smart home. Samantha and Lamont Westmoreland realized something was wrong when they began to hear a voice over the in-house video system. Then they started hearing loud music throughout the house and noticed the thermostat had been ratcheted up to a sweltering temperature. "My heart was racing," Samantha told Fox 6 News. "I felt so violated at that point." The couple had originally installed a Google Nest system in their house in November 2018. On September 17, Samantha came home and found that the thermostat had been turned up to 90 degrees. Thinking it was a mistake, she reset the thermostat.
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Close-up of 3rd generation Nest Learning Thermostat, a smart home thermostat from Google Inc, on a white wall, set to heat setting, San Ramon, California, May 31, 2018. Smith Collection/Gado/Getty Image
The thermostat went back up, though, and a disembodied voice started talking to her and her husband through the camera in the kitchen and playing loud, "vulgar" music. "So I unplugged it and turned it facing the ceiling," Samantha said. The Westmorelands eventually contacted their internet service provider and changed their network ID, thinking that someone had hacked first into their wifi and then begun using their Nest. "People need to be educated and know that this is real, and this is happening, and it is super scary, and you don't realize it until it's actually happening to you," Samantha said. The Westmorelands are not the first smart-home owners to be hacked: In January, someone took over a West Barrington, Illinois, couple's Nest cameras and began talking to their 7-month-old. "I was shocked to hear a deep, manly voice talking," Arjun Sud told WBBM-TV. "My blood ran cold." "[He was] asking me, you know, why I'm looking at him — because he saw obviously that I was looking back — and continuing to taunt me." The hacker hurled obscenities and changed the temperature in the house to 90 degrees. After Sud disconnected the cameras, he contacted Nest, which told him to use two-factor authentication when logging in for added security.
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A Nest Cam is displayed during the Google I/O conference at Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View, California on May 7, 2019. JOSH EDELSON/AFP/Getty Images
That same month, a California family says someone used their Nest camera's speaker to warn of an impending missile strike from North Korea. In a statement in February, Google maintained that those incidents didn't stem from a system breach but rather customers "using compromised passwords ... exposed through breaches on other websites." While there are 14.2 billion smart-home devices in use this year—and 25 billion expected to be in use by 2021—there is no one organization responsible for monitoring or regulating security measures for the numerous devices.