In the 80s, cyberpunk dystopian fiction had hackers take over security cameras and use it to dodge the man, be able to slip unseen by them, and track people.
In the cyberpunk dystopian present, hackers take over security cameras to get them to solve complex mathematical problems on which there are bounties (using someone else's electricity)1, and use the cameras connection to the network to repeatedly yell "hello" to another computer in a way that makes the computer confused and clogs the network pipes.2
Truth is stranger than fiction.
If you need more details, I'll be back after I take my self driving electric car3 for a drive to go for a ride on my hoverboard4 while live-streaming it using a vanity flying self-piloted robot drone5 which tracks my pocket supercomputer6 to update my personal TV channel7 which I earn beer money from; meanwhile, another robot will vacuum my floors8.
- Dogecoin
- Mirai
- Tesla
- Walmart
- Auto-tracking drones
- 1980 supercomputer
- YouTube
- Robot vacuum