Bondage Bandit Alexa May 2026
The post went viral within the smart home hacking community. Soon, users began competing to create the most disturbing or elaborate "Bondage Bandit" routines for their Echo Dots and Alexa-enabled smart plugs. The transition from a simple voice routine to a full-blown urban legend occurred in early 2022. A now-deleted Twitter thread (archived by the Internet Folklore Database) claimed that a user named "Alexa" (real name: Alexia M.) had been arrested for "remote confinement."
To the uninitiated, the name sounds like either a rejected Batman villain or a heavy metal album title. To those in the know, "Bondage Bandit Alexa" represents a peculiar convergence of tech fetishism, cyber-pranksterism, and the modern moral panic surrounding AI voice assistants. bondage bandit alexa
However, there is a real 23-year-old white-hat hacker from Berlin who uses the handle "@bondage_bandit" on GitHub. She (pronouns she/they) created a proof-of-concept in 2023 called "AlexaLocker," which demonstrates how an exploited Echo Plus can toggle smart plugs connected to electromagnetic door strikes. She explicitly states in her README: "Do not use on non-consenting humans. This is for escape room designers only." The post went viral within the smart home hacking community
Is she real? No. Is she possible? With enough custom hardware and malicious intent, terrifyingly yes. A now-deleted Twitter thread (archived by the Internet