Skip to content

Davey Winder

delivering award-winning technology journalism since 1991

  • home
  • about me
  • follow me on mastodon
  • privacy policy
  • Toggle search form
joke gun with bang flag

Smart gun broken by smarter hacker with a magnet

Posted on August 10, 2017August 10, 2017 By Davey Winder 6 Comments on Smart gun broken by smarter hacker with a magnet

The smart gun has moved out of science fiction, and is now science fact: how smart and secure are they?

With advances in technology, smart guns have eventually started to get traction in real life. There are things such as the Identilock biometric trigger guard accessory, which locks the gun down unless the right fingerprint verifies the rightful owner. Then there is the Armatix IP1, a gun with the identity verification built right in. It works by requiring the owner to wear a smartwatch device while using the pistol. Unless the watch and the pistol are within 12″ of each other, the gun will not fire.

Or at least that’s the theory.

Click here to read complete article

Analysis Tags:firearms, Hacking

Post navigation

Previous Post: Weaponised AI. Davey Winder asks the industry – is that a thing yet?
Next Post: How secure is your localhost domain? Hint – it may not be what it says

Related Articles

Forget Passwords, This New Tech Is Nearly Hacker-Proof, 1Password Says Analysis
Gmail Hackers Leave Vital Clues Behind—Check These 3 Things Now Analysis
No, 1Password Has Not Just Been Hacked—Your Passwords Are Safe Analysis
New Critical Security Warning For iPhone, iPad, Watch, Mac—Attacks Underway Analysis
New Emergency Chrome Security Update After Critical iOS 16.6.1 Release Analysis
New iPhone iOS 16 Bluetooth Hack Attack—How To Stop It Analysis

Comments (6) on “Smart gun broken by smarter hacker with a magnet”

  1. Kate Gatbing says:
    August 11, 2017 at 8:12 AM

    The ingenuity of the researcher is to be commended. I hope the gun has been recalled as unfit for purpose.

  2. Davey Winder says:
    August 11, 2017 at 8:37 AM

    I don’t know if the manufacturer has issued a recall, but I imagine it is unlikely. Mainly as, while I obviously agree about the research and the vulnerabilities uncovered by it, the real world risk resulting from all this is likely pretty minimal. What are the chances that during a ‘home invasion’ the attacker would know that the occupier owned this particular weapon and so came prepared with both a signal jammer and a magnetic unlocker? All on the off-chance that the weapon may be either used against them or accessible for them to use against the householder. What the story should prompt is for the manufacturer to think again about how it secures these weapons, and adapt the technology with a more secure mindset. In other words, to learn from the mistakes that have been revealed and move forwards armed (no pun intended) with that knowledge.

  3. Jenny Taylor says:
    September 2, 2017 at 8:24 AM

    Interesting read. Thanks.

  4. Davey Winder says:
    September 2, 2017 at 9:00 AM

    Thanks for reading, and taking the time to comment.

  5. Kamil Khan says:
    October 20, 2017 at 7:09 AM

    You didn’t mention the legal angle. If I own a smart gun that can, so the manufacturer claims, only be fired by me and someone else fires it and injures or kills with it, then where does the legal liability sit?

  6. Davey Winder says:
    October 20, 2017 at 9:15 AM

    It’s an interesting one for sure, and a conversation that I was having on Facebook just yesterday in fact! IANAL but surely whoever pulled the trigger is liable for the consequences of that act, with the justice system determining guilt and punishment if so needed? The gun owner might be liable for some legal action (again IANAL) if they did not take appropriate measures to ensure the gun was not accessible to others, although obviously the smart gun protective system that failed would play into this debate. I’d like to think that the manufacturer/vendor would have some liability in law, and that there would be consequences as a result of such a failure, but I rather suspect I would be wrong in reality…

Comments are closed.

Categories

Post Archive

Tags

0day Analysis Android Apple Apps breach bug bounty Business Chrome crime Cybercrime Data Protection Encryption Enterprise Google Government Hackers Hacking Health healthcare industry iOS IoT iPhone Malware Microsoft News NHS Opinion passwords Phishing Privacy ransomware Research Russia Samsung threat intelligence Twitter Update Vulnerabilites vulnerabilities Vulnerability Windows Windows 10 zero-day

Copyright © 2025 Davey Winder .

×
Cookies
We serve cookies. If you think that's ok, just click "Accept all". You can also choose what kind of cookies you want by clicking "Settings". Read our cookie policy
Settings Refuse all Accept all
Cookies
Choose what kind of cookies to accept. Your choice will be saved for one year. Read our cookie policy
  • Necessary
    These cookies are not optional. They are needed for the website to function.
  • Statistics
    In order for us to improve the website's functionality and structure, based on how the website is used.
  • Experience
    In order for our website to perform as well as possible during your visit. If you refuse these cookies, some functionality will disappear from the website.
  • Marketing
    By sharing your interests and behavior as you visit our site, you increase the chance of seeing personalized content and offers.
Save Refuse all Accept all
GDPR Cookie Policy