| Turns out the hacked toothbrush story was false, an urban legend: An update from Wired: 
 How 3 Million Hacked Toothbrushes Became a Cyber Urban Legend
 
 Hackers have, in the real world,  caused  blackouts,  set  fire to a steel mill, and released worms that took down medical record  systems in hospitals  across  the US  and  the UK. So it hardly seems necessary to invent new nightmares about them  taking over our toothbrushes.
 
 Yet, when the Swiss newspaper Aargauer Zeitung  published a story that cybercriminals had infected 3 million  internet-connected toothbrushes with malware, then used them to launch a  cyberattack that downed a website for four hours and caused millions of dollars  in damage, the tale was somehow irresistible. This week, news outlets around  the world picked up the story, which quoted the cybersecurity firm Fortinet as  its source, spinning it out as the perfect illustration of how hackers can  exploit the most mundane technology for epic malevolence. “This example, which  seems like a Hollywood scenario, actually happened,” the  Swiss newspaper wrote.
 
 Except, of course, it didn’t. Cybersecurity professionals  quickly started to point out that the story was unsupported by any evidence—and  was somewhat absurd on its face. (Even the  Mirai  botnet, which knocked out its targets with record-breaking tsunamis of junk  traffic and eventually broke a large fraction of the internet, infected only  650,000 internet-connected devices at its peak.)
 
 Fortinet belatedly sought to correct the record, writing in  public statements that “it appears that due to translations the narrative on  this topic has been stretched to the point where hypothetical and actual  scenarios are blurred.” But the Aargauer Zeitung pointed the finger  back at Fortinet, noting in a  follow-up story that Fortinet provided exact details of the  dental doomsday it described as real, and that the company even reviewed the  text of the article prior to publication. Regardless of who’s to blame, at  least this cyber urban legend has  inspired  some  solid  meme  content.
 
 wired.com
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