Make sure your phone has a full charge before you head out because FBI agents are now sounding alarm bells and telling Americans not to use public charging stations at hotels, stores, or airports.
Bad guys have figured out how to get into your devices and place nasty malware that can lead to all sorts of security issues down the road.
Newser reports that Desperate for some juice for your phone while traveling? Don't resort to using a free public phone-charging station, the FBI warns. "Avoid using free charging stations in airports, hotels or shopping centers," the FBI's Denver office tweets. "Bad actors have figured out ways to use public USB ports to introduce malware and monitoring software onto devices. Carry your own charger and USB cord and use an electrical outlet instead." The FBI tells Axios the warning is just a regular reminder of an FCC consumer warning about the issue; the Denver office did not reference any specific recent incidents. Axios notes it's a tricky attack to pull off, and not many cases have been publicly reported lately.
The FCC warning, last updated in 2021, refers to "juice jacking" as a cyber-theft tactic in which "malware installed through a dirty USB port can lock a device or export personal data and passwords directly to the perpet
rator. Criminals can use that information to access online accounts or sell it to other bad actors." Fraudsters, they warn, might leave charging cables plugged in to charging stations, or give out cables disguised as promotional items. "Consider carrying a charging-only cable, which prevents data from sending or receiving while charging, from a trusted supplier," the FCC suggests. Public WiFi networks can also allow cybercriminals to target people, the agency warns.
It’s better to let your phone go dead than risk having all your privet info hacked.