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How Botnets Like Aisuru Are Turning Smart Devices Into Cyber Weapons

Botnets like Aisuru and ResHydra exploit millions of smart devices, posing growing cyber threats used in warfare and large-scale digital attacks.

Published By: Amreen Ahmad
Last Updated: September 17, 2025 22:47:34 IST

The digital age has in great advancements but one of the most important threats to global cybersecurity today is the botnet, a collection of hijacked devices. The recent investigations report that hackers have again seized tens of thousands of cleaned devices released by the FBI, ready to be used as weapons against the digital infrastructures around the world.

What Are Botnets & Why Are They Dangerous Cyber Weapons?

Botnets are consisting of many compromised computers and internet-enabled devices also infected with malware, including routers, security cameras and smart TVs linked to the internet but controlled remotely by cybercriminals often without the devices owners ever knowing it.

These networks are used to launch large-scale attacks by spamming an email message, distributing ransomware or systems with Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attacks. The FBI has recently cleaned up about 95,000 devices and the fact released the devices set the stage for hackers to regrasp them within a furious race among cybercriminal groups.

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What is Aisuru?

Aisuru is an advanced botnet group that rapidly commandeered more than a quarter of the devices liberated by the FBI. This network began launching some of the most significant DDoS attacks ever recorded.

On September 1, Aisuru released a record high amount of trash traffic, registering 11.5 trillion bits per second and disrupting the internet’s speeds equivalent to over 50,000 home connections at once this achievement marked the new height in cyber-attack intensity.

Why Aisuru Botnet Group Matters?

Aisuru is that it concentrates on those less- updated, always on gadgets such as smart TVs, routers and IP cameras. The ordinary botnets that infect home computers, these gadgets typically remain connected and neglected rendering them really good targets.

Their clearing of the FBI was in fact a clearing of the path toward occupation by Aisuru the sheer extent to which these threats have become stealthy and opportunistic.

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How Millions of Smart TVs Become Part of Botnet Networks?

Google revealed that one of the botnets that was dismantled expanded to unprecedented levels from 74,000 infected Android TVs in 2023 to over ten million just two years later creating what was believed to be the largest recognized botnet of exclusive smart TVs.

Such compromised devices were used to create artificial ad clicks at an unmeasured scale, but they could easily be used for greater destructive purposes similar to ransomware or DDoS attacks. The ever-increasing number of easily hackable smart TVs just highlights the mounting household electronic risks.

Botnets Are Now Being Used by Countries in Cyber Warfare

Botnet threats were only applicable to sites but are now expanded to the whole internet infrastructure of countries. This alarming turn is exemplified by experts such as Craig Labovitz from Nokia.

In an event where the UK has accused the Russian GRU of using DDoS against Ukrainian banks during military operations highlight how now botnets are entering into the geopolitical cyber ware and creating even more strategic impact.

What Is ResHydra?

ResHydra is some other huge botnet using tens of million devices, originally using it for online fraud but has now extended its reach towards aggressive cyberattacks. According to security researcher Chris Formosa, these gigantic botnets can wreak havoc onto the country’s digital infrastructure if left unmonitored.

Anytime it happens that Aisuru and ResHydra would find a way to combine all their might even the highest defenses of technology giants such as Google and Amazon would not stand a chance against them.

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Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional cybersecurity advice. Always follow official guidelines.

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