- Oct 23, 2012
- 12,527
Hard to place this article in any forum however I thought this the best place to post it.
A writer for Vanity fair,who is quite outspoken,suffered a seizure after he was sent a strobe tweet.
Apparently it is common knowledge that he suffers from epilepsy.
This brings us to a new kind of cyber attack,if you will,which very well could have resulted in a death.
The interesting thing is how do we categorize such an attack and could this be a new cyber crime trend.
Read the article below.
What do you think?
A writer for Vanity fair,who is quite outspoken,suffered a seizure after he was sent a strobe tweet.
Apparently it is common knowledge that he suffers from epilepsy.
This brings us to a new kind of cyber attack,if you will,which very well could have resulted in a death.
The interesting thing is how do we categorize such an attack and could this be a new cyber crime trend.
Read the article below.
What do you think?
Kurt Eichenwald is a writer for Vanity Fair, Newsweek and is a New York Times bestselling author. He has 231,000 followers on Twitter, and just so happens to be an outspoken critic of US President-Elect Donald Trump.
Being an outspoken critic of anything or anyone of course comes with caveats that include criticism of your views and the possibility of personal criticism or attack. However, the attack in this case is quite unique, because it took place on twitter and had a direct physical health-related impact.
An anonymous Twitter user with knowledge of Eichenwald's epilepsy appeared to have crafted a GIF which was designed to trigger his condition, with the words 'You deserve a seizure for your posts' at the forefront of the flashing image.
Shortly after the tweet was received, Eichenwald's wife tweeted that he had had a seizure, and he later confirmed in a series of tweets that he would be taking a break from twitter and pursuing legal action against the individual who sent the image.
Eichenwald goes on to clarify that the tweet worked, and that his wife was terrified. Apparently the police are investigating whether the attack is federal crime as it potentially crosses state boundaries.
Stefano Seri of Aston University, a professor of clinical neurophysiology and developmental neuropsychiatry, had the following advice for anyone affected by epilepsy who is concerned about the incident:
"You should sit far enough from the stimulus so it doesn't fill your vision and watch in a sufficiently lit room so the impact of any flashes is lessened," the professor advised.
"In a well lit room your baseline is higher, so changes are less dramatic. Don't open attachments from people you don't know."
The notion of an attack on Twitter causing physical (rather than mental) distress is relatively new. Tweets inspiring hate or violence are sadly commonplace, but a targeted attack on an epilepsy sufferer is a serious, even potentially fatal, escalation.
Source: BBC