Note: the question is not about public charging stations, there is an answer for that already. The question is just about whether there’s anything to be concerned about from a security standpoint when buying an adapter, cable, or charger from Amazon, Walmart, Newegg, or anywhere else.
Personally I would have ‘thought’ not, as they don’t have any memory storage and processor as such to execute code. That would have to be done from the other system and executed on your system.
Public charging stations are ideal if your phone is low on battery. Unfortunately, [i]research has shown that they also have the[/i] [b]potential[/b] to be useful tools for hackers.
This is because USB charging stations can also be designed to both inject malware and steal data from anyone that uses them.
So potential not actual and I believe the other remarks also apply to cables, etc…
Juice jacking is possible because of how USB ports are designed. On a phone, [i]they are primarily used for charging but they are equally suitable for transferring data[/i]. This means that whenever you plug your phone in to charge, you are also potentially opening the door to data transfers.
It's considered a potential threat, not an actual threat, because most phones now ask permission before data transfers are initiated.
You have to consider that the threat isn’t from the cables/charger as such but the source (computer) executing code (providing the juice) to make any transfer and execute commands to be run on the target system. Don’t lose site of the fact that the target system could/should have its own protection Avast (presumably) in your case.
But in the case of juice jacking from a public port, it’s going directly from the port into the phone (via a cable as a conduit). But that wouldn’t necessarily mean that the cable/adapter/charger itself can hold the “juice” until such time that it’s connected to a phone/PC whereupon it will deliver it. In other words, the problem with public ports (that you’re using for reference) may only be becasue the device is actually connected to the hacked port, but if you only stuck a wire into that port without anything on the other end, would it become infected itself? I’m not so sure that’s the case. What do you think?
That’s a secondary point. The main thing is - is there such a concept as adapters/cables/chargers being able to be hacked (it being different than public ports notwithstanding).
Its a play on words/joke (I believe), a hangman’s noose a length of rope with a loop at the end. Substitute the rope for a length of cable, watch out for hanging cables/rope on your porch/balcony.