This screenshot shows varying frequencies of keystrokes, with the arrow pointing to what a stroke on the space bar looks like on a spectrogram.
(Credit: Inverse Path)VANCOUVER, B.C.--Presenters at the CanSecWest security conference detailed on Thursday how they can sniff data by analyzing keystroke vibrations using a laser trained on a shiny laptop or through electrical signals coming from a PC connected to a PS/2 keyboard and plugged into a socket.
Using equipment costing about $80, researchers from Inverse Path were able to point a laser on the reflective surface of a laptop between 50 feet and 100 feet away and determine what letters were typed.
Chief Security Engineer Andrea Barisani and hardware hacker Daniele Bianco used a handmade laser microphone device and a photo diode to measure the vibrations, software for analyzing the spectrograms of frequencies from different keystrokes, as well as technology to apply the data to a dictionary to try to guess the words. They used a technique called dynamic time warping that's typically used for speech recognition applications, to measure the similarity of signals.
Line-of-sight on the laptop is needed, but it works through a glass window, they said. Using an infrared laser would prevent a victim from knowing they were being spied on.
The only real way to mitigate against this type of spying would be to change your typing position and mistype words, Barisani said.
In the second attack method, the researchers were able to spy on the keystrokes of a computer which was using a PS/2 keyboard through a ground line from a power plug in an outlet 50 feet away.
"Information leaks to the electric grid," said Barisani. "It can be detected on the power plug, including nearby ones sharing the same electric line" as the victim's computer.
The researchers used a digital oscilloscope and analog-digital converter, as well as filtering technology to isolate the victim's keystroke pulses from other noise on the power line.
Their initial test, which took about five days to prepare and perform, enabled them to record individual keystrokes but not continuous data such as words and sentences, though they expect to be able to do that within a few months, Barisani said.
In addition to being used to sniff a neighbor's keystrokes in a nearby room, the attack could be used to sniff data from ATM machines that use PS/2 or similar keypads, Barsani said. The attack does not work against laptops or USB keyboards, he said.
The attacks are similar to other recent research that involves sniffing keystrokes through a wireless antenna.
And of course there is the big daddy of these types of remote sniffing attacks, TEMPEST, which allows someone with a lot of expensive equipment to sniff the electromagnetic radiation emanating from a video display.
The new attacks are easier and can be accomplished at lower cost, the researchers said.
Updated at 5:53 p.m. PDT with information on a second winner at the ongoing contest.
Charlie Miller won $5,000 after demonstrating a new Safari exploit as part of the Pwn2Own hacking contest at CanSecWest.
(Credit: Elinor Mills/CNET)VANCOUVER, Canada--The security expert who won $10,000 hacking a MacBook Air in less than two minutes last year won $5,000 on Wednesday by exploiting a hole in Safari in 10 seconds or so.
Charlie Miller, principal security analyst at Independent Security Evaluators, used a MacBook running the latest version of the Mac OS as part of a contest at the CanSecWest security conference called "Pwn2Own," which is hacker slang for gaining control of a computer.
The security hole, which Miller said he discovered last year, allows a remote attacker to gain control of a machine simply by getting the computer user to click on a malicious URL, as Miller demonstrated.
"It's not easy, but this worked with one click" from the Safari browser, he said.
Miller is prevented by contest rules from revealing details of the exploit. He said he told Apple representatives what he planned to do earlier in the day. "They're happy because they get free research and get a bug fixed," he said.
The contest is sponsored by TippingPoint, which will share details on the exploit with Apple and develop a patch for it. TippingPoint is offering $5,000 for each new exploit demonstrated in the major browsers and $10,000 for each successful exploit in the major smartphones, as well.
Previously, Miller discovered a hole in the mobile version of Safari shortly after the iPhone was launched in 2007.
Later in the day, a 25-year-old computer science student at the University of Oldenburg in Germany, won $15,000 for exploits he demonstrated in IE 8, Safari, and Firefox. The student, who declined to give his full name, gets to keep the Sony Vaio he did his exploits on, and Miller gets to keep the MacBook he used.
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