Some cities’ district attorneys already warn travelers to avoid public USB chargers and free charging appliances. Today cybersecurity is extra important, as we have all of our important info stored in our phones, including documents, money, and personal information.
USB charging stations can be easily hacked.
Charge your phone only through a power outlet or via a charged-at-home power bank.
Don’t use other people’s cables and don’t pick a cable up if someone left it in a public space.
If you urgently need to charge your phone, connect the power bank to the public station and then connect your phone to the power bank.
The infrastructure of public spaces is basically safe, but hackers often install fake USB charging sockets, similar to the way people hack ATMs. A few years ago, at the cybersecurity conference DEFCON, there were free charging stations, and when participants used them, they would get a pop-up on their device that said never use public charging stations, especially at a hacker’s conference.
If you don`t have an outlet plug adapter, but you have a power bank, you can plug it into the public charging USB socket, and then connect the phone to the power bank, so there’s no direct connection. Then data transfer will be basically impossible.
You can use juice-jack defenders in unsafe charging situations via USB.
There are ways to be on the safer side, if connecting to the public stations is inevitable. You can purchase a special adapter that can be inserted into the charging cord and that’ll cut the transmission of data through it. But it still doesn’t give you a 100% safe guarantee against hacker’s attacks.
Preview photo credit Drayton_Trax / reddit, TastesLikeCashew / reddit