"Smart" devices can gather video or other (1)
i and share it over the internet, making our lives easier. But they may also invite hackers into our homes.
In October 2016, hackers hit a company called Dyn. After the hack, people around the world had trouble getting to many (2) w , including Amazon, Netflix and Twitter.
But please don't think that hackers are only interested in using people's devices, mostly smart
(A) d , to attack a company. Hackers can use those devices to hack individuals and get into our homes too.
But how can we keep hackers away from our homes?
One (3) s is easy: Change your password. "People don't like passwords," Hong says. Many people use the same password for years. Moreover, many people choose passwords that are remarkably simple, he adds — "like 12345, or their names." To make a device more secure, change each (B)
p often and choose (C) s a hacker can't guess.
Smart devices you tend to buy pose a potential
(D) d . It is tempting for you to buy new smart gadgets. And it can be hard to tell which are secure. That's why many scientists recommend that people wait a few weeks after a new (4) g appears before buying it. The general rule of thumb is: Don't be the first penguin in the water.
Now the security (5) p needs computer scientists who can think like hackers. They have to be able to find flaws in new smart devices. They look at a system and think, "how can they break it? Is it really secure?"
Those questions are typical of scientists who study (E) s . These are people who can't help trying to break things all the time. That's the same thing a hacker wants to do. But instead of stealing data or interfering with a person's life, computer-security scientists want to make the world safer.
(A, B, C, D, E FOR CROSS, 1, 2, 3, 4. 5 FOR DOWN. The first letters of the absents were given.)