Rescu band violates HIPAA, OMG shut the barn door!!!
I agree LowKey it is up to the user to understand the vulnerabilities of the technology they are using. Sort of like the small town or country person who moves into NYC or Boston and leaves their front/back door unlocked and window curtains open.
Your new high tech car can be hacked brakes triggered to turn on. So may not be a good idea to flip off people or cut them off in traffic. I also strongly encourage people to turn off all internet connected devices when not being used and keep antivirus/firewall software updated. Keep a low profile.
I was at my cousin's home in Canada (he is a very smart man who has been very financially successful in life), and this total stranger pulled up at the curb and was using a laptop. My other cousin and I gave him a hard time about not employing the highest level of security on his WiFi. It was obvious what the guy in the car at the curb was doing. User be ware or live under a rock with a tin cap on and use "Air Gapped" electronic devices only. LOL Heck I once designed fiber optic communications systems for a Federal Agency (that we were not allowed to ever mention the name of but has been in the news a lot) because this is more difficult to tap into than twisted pair copper (Cat 6 or Cat 5). You be the judge. Have courier pass notes in code instead?
So RescU Wristband, well if some stranger figures out my pulse rate, it may violate Federal HIPAA privacy rules, but I won't let that raise my blood pressure to dangerous levels. Perhaps just a little.
FYI: if you are one of the most well known Female White Rappers from the "land down under" you might want to use a "throw away" "pay as you go" mobile phone to order your delivery pizza, ha ha ha bah bah
http://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/...ry?id=28840350
"I'm so fancy" but I like me some Papa John's Pizza pie.
Big Brother using SmartTV listening to Gary Busey, hearing Blah Blah Buzzzzzz
If you're like Gary Busey you don't worry about people using the "idiot box" to spy on you because you like to talk to things. LOL
http://youtu.be/HHoNQrxG_8M
But for the rest of us… we just feel a little bit more comfortable disabling some of these features on our Samsung SmartTVs
http://www.cnet.com/how-to/samsung-smart-tv-spying/
And Smart cars, and smart refrigerators, AC controllers, Home Security systems with video monitoring that can be controlled with apps on Smart-Phones and on and on. Well as long as you use a highly encrypted unique password for each system so if one is compromised they are not all hacked into, then you just need to have these all memorized. Aw heck with it all, I'm gonna go live under a rock and wear a tin hat with LowKey. LOL got any space under there. Hows the weather? Is the snow pilling up high on that rock?