Yeah,About so this isn't good.
What if the very act of tapping your smartphone's passcode was all it took to expose that code to hackers?
Are you sitting down right now? You should probably sit down.
SEE ALSO: Put a lock screen on your phone, sheeple!Remember that story on how fingerprint locks on smartphones can be duped? And that Samsung's facial recognition system can be tricked with a photo of a person?
Well, as more and more of our personal data is stored on smartphones, the ways of securing those phones continue to be revealed as less and less robust. Next on the chopping block is your trusty PIN.
Modern smartphones come equipped with tons of sensors: cameras, microphones, GPS, accelerometers, gyroscopes, etc. According to a new study published in the Journal of Information Security and Applications, this data in aggregate is precise enough to determine what actions a user is taking with her phone — right down to the password she taps to unlock it.
A little malicious code plus the sensors that come standard on most smartphones is apparently all that it takes these days to render your phone's security moot.
The study authors haven't found this attack in the wild, but rather demonstrated that it works. Which, frankly, is scary enough. As Wikileaks' dump of alleged CIA hacking tools has shown, known attacks have a way of getting passed around.
"Our study confirms that embedded JavaScript code can compromise user sensitive information by listening to the side channel data provided by the motion and orientation sensors without any user permission, through an inactive tab, iframe, or minimised browser (even when the screen of the mobile phone is locked)," wrote study co-author Dr. Maryam Mehrnezhad on the Newcastle University blog. "We demonstrate the practicality of this attack by collecting data from real users and reporting high success rates, up to 70% identification of digits (PIN) in Android and 56% in iOS."
A lot of browsers are susceptible, including Chrome, Firefox, and Safari. That means you don't even have to click a weird link or download a strange file to accidentally leak your taps to a malicious hacker or government official.
Simply going about your daily routine is enough to render your password pwned — providing perhaps an unfortunate metaphor for seemingly more and more of online life.
Topics Apple Cybersecurity Samsung
The uncommon birds of George Edwards, born today in 1694Abraham Cahan’s “A Bintel Brief” letters illustratedA Week (or More) in Culture: Mimi Pond, Cartoonist by Mimi PondGood Taste by Sadie SteinThe Morning News Roundup for March 28, 2014The Morning News Roundup for April 17, 2014Listen to Frederick Seidel read his poem “For Holly Andersen”Abraham Cahan’s “A Bintel Brief” letters illustratedWilliam Hazlitt on Meeting Poet Samuel Taylor ColeridgeRead an Excerpt from Josep Pla’s The Gray NotebookWilliam Hazlitt on Meeting Poet Samuel Taylor ColeridgeStupid Is by Sadie SteinGive a Warm Welcome to Our Newest Issue by Dan PiepenbringThe Morning News Roundup for April 14, 2014The Morning News Roundup for April 16, 2014How to Save Frozen BooksJohn Oliver gleefully weighs in on the TrumpWhat We‘re Loving: Good Friday Riffs, Your New White HairThe Story Behind “Cunning”Paul Barbera’s Photos of Our Office Bill Clinton had the nerve to keep his buddy Barack Obama waiting Samsung's Galaxy S10 may come with a cryptocurrency wallet James Corden silenced Kim Kardashian West haters with one tweet Amazon stops selling Echo Wall Clocks With 3 million users, Patreon has gone mainstream MoviePass to offer unlimited plan again Mark Zuckerberg killed a goat and served it to Jack Dorsey ... cold Casio’s new G Girl Scouts and HPE launch new cybersecurity game and patch Now Facebook can more easily delete your trash Pages YouTube promises to stop recommending flat Earth and 9/11 truther videos So, sheet masks for your boobs are a thing House hunting apps make me want to gouge my eyes out Xiaomi's folding phone really exists, and it looks amazing We really need a new word for binge Man wearing gorilla mask at Black Lives Matter protest charged with intimidation Supreme Court decision on Trump's trans military ban makes painful limbo even worse The polar vortex will return, and bring the coldest temps of the year How often should we wash our reusable coffee cups? Maisie Williams reveals how she thinks fans will react to the end of 'Game of Thrones'
2.1344s , 8199.8046875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【About】,Wisdom Convergence Information Network