PewDiePie hacks 50,000 printers to tell peoples to Subscribe Me ?
PewDiePie hacks 50,000 printers to tell peoples to Subscribe Me?
If you a Youtube lover then you will definitely familiar with PewDiePie has dominated the platform for the past 5 years as the most - subscribe channel.PewDiePie has built up a phenomenal following among young fans on the platform ( 18-24 years old).
Over the course of this week, some printers have been printing out a strange message asking people to subscribe to PewDiePie's YouTube channel. The message appears to be the result of a simple exploit that allows printers to receive data over the internet, including print commands. A person with the online handle TheHackerGiraffe has claimed responsibility for the attack.
Twitter users in the United States, Canada and England have all posted the printouts, along with confused messages about how it happened. TheHackerGiraffe told Engadget that he sent the message to 50,000 printers. He found the targets on Shodan.io, which is basically a search engine for unsecured, internet-connected devices. TheHackerGiraffe said there are about 800,000 printers total that appear exploitable.
If you a Youtube lover then you will definitely familiar with PewDiePie has dominated the platform for the past 5 years as the most - subscribe channel.PewDiePie has built up a phenomenal following among young fans on the platform ( 18-24 years old).
| PewDiePie hacks 50,000 printers to tell peoples to Subscribe Me ? |
Over the course of this week, some printers have been printing out a strange message asking people to subscribe to PewDiePie's YouTube channel. The message appears to be the result of a simple exploit that allows printers to receive data over the internet, including print commands. A person with the online handle TheHackerGiraffe has claimed responsibility for the attack.
Twitter users in the United States, Canada and England have all posted the printouts, along with confused messages about how it happened. TheHackerGiraffe told Engadget that he sent the message to 50,000 printers. He found the targets on Shodan.io, which is basically a search engine for unsecured, internet-connected devices. TheHackerGiraffe said there are about 800,000 printers total that appear exploitable.
T-Series is a major music and film production company based in India, that has built up a solid following by uploading music, videos, and film trailers to their YouTube Channel T-Series. The channel has been active since 2006 has been growing at a very steady rate until it exploded in popularity over the past couple of years. Now it's become the World's most famous independent creator and the most-watched media company on the platform. T-Series have uploaded over 13k videos on YouTube, with this music video from Guru Randhawa generating 603 Million YouTube views.

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