Bay Area camera company hack reaches schools, gyms, prisons
Drew Harwell, The Washington Post
March 10, 2021
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In one video, a woman in a hospital room watches over someone sleeping in an intensive-care-unit bed. In another, a man and three children celebrate one Sunday afternoon over a completed puzzle in a carpeted playroom.
The private moments would have, in some other time, been constrained to memory. But something else had been watching: an internet-connected camera managed by the San Mateo, Calif.-based security start-up Verkada, which sells cameras and software that customers can use to watch live video from anywhere across the Web.
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MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell was seen on Sunday asking attendees at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) to take their face masks off before taking photos with him.
The statue is the work of Tommy Zegan, an American expat who carted his creation up over the boarder from Mexico, where he lives. Zegan is a former youth pastor, and he took umbrage with the idea that he’d built an idol.
“It’s not an idol,” he told Mediaite “I know the biblical definition of an idol. This is not an idol. This is a sculpture.”
Zegan has two versions of the statue. He hopes to sell the famous golden one for $100,000 and has dreams that the second, a stainless steel number, will find a home in a future Trump presidential library. In fact, he already tried once to present Trump with his ido er