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How to use electrical outlets and cheap lasers to steal data

Researches plan to demonstrate security weaknesses of keyboards at Black Hat.
By Tim Greene, Network World
July 09, 2009 11:43 AM ET
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If attackers intent on data theft can tap into an electrical socket near a computer or if they can draw a bead on the machine with a laser, they can steal whatever is being typed into it.

How to execute these attacks will be demonstrated at the Black Hat USA 2009 security conference in Las Vegas later this month by Andrea Barisani and Daniele Bianco, a pair of researchers for network security consultancy Inverse Path.

“The only thing you need for successful attacks are either the electrical grid or a distant line of sight, no expensive piece of equipment is required,” Barisani and Bianco say in a paper describing the hacks.

The equipment to carry out the power-line attack could cost as little as $500, and the laser attack gear costs about $100 if the attacker already owns a laptop with a sound card, says Barisani. Carrying out the attacks took about a week, he says.

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“We think it is important to raise the awareness about these unconventional attacks and we hope to see more work on this topic in the future,” Barisani and Bianco say in their paper. Others with more time and money could doubtless create better spying tools using the same concepts, they say.

In the power-line exploit, the attacker grabs the keyboard signals that are generated by hitting keys. Because the data wire within the keyboard cable is unshielded, the signals leak into the ground wire in the cable, and from there into the ground wire of the electrical system feeding the computer. Bit streams generated by the keyboards that indicate what keys have been struck create voltage fluctuations in the grounds, they say.

Attackers extend the ground of a nearby power socket and attach to it two probes separated by a resistor. The voltage difference and the fluctuations in that difference – the keyboard signals – are captured from both ends of the resistor and converted to letters.

To pull the signal out of the ground noise, a reference ground is needed, they say. “A “reference” ground is any piece of metal with a direct physical connection to the Earth, a sink or toilet pipe is perfect for this purpose (while albeit not very classy) and easily reachable (especially if you are performing the attack from [a] hotel room,” they say in their paper.
Since keyboards and mice signals are in the 1 to 20 kHz range, a filter can isolate that range for listening, they say.

Variations in individual keyboards and mice result in each keyboard signaling in a slightly different frequency range. With careful filtering, that makes it possible to zero in on a particular keyboard in an environment where many keyboards are in use, the researchers say.

The attack proved successful when tapping electric sockets located up to 15 meters from where the target computer was plugged in the researchers say.

This method would not work if the computer were unplugged from the wall, such as a laptop running on its battery. The second attack can prove effective in this case, Bianco’s and Barisani’s paper says.

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hacking via laser and powerBy Anonymous on July 9, 2009, 5:40 pmSpy agencies been using laser for along time to listen to converations through window by reading the vibrations of the window with a laser. The analog monitors,...

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lasers and windowsBy Anonymous on July 9, 2009, 5:45 pmThat's why places with secure conversations have transducers on the windows playing music. It messes up the laser focused on the window recording the vibrations. Still,...

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hacking via powerBy Anonymous on July 9, 2009, 11:38 pmHmm. Laptops use external power supplies with no ground connection. And the load is pretty much constant as the laptop runs off its battery, and the supply merely...

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UPS could do the trickBy Anonymous on July 10, 2009, 12:40 amDouble-conversion / online UPS could provide enough isolation.

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There is still the laserBy Anon on July 10, 2009, 3:21 amThere is still the laser method that can be used for laptops.

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Cordless keyboards would be immune from power supply attackBy Ajoy Bhatia on July 10, 2009, 3:25 amThe power supply method would also not be useful against desktop if the keyboard is cordless, I suppose. A good reason to go get a cordless keyboard - and a cordless...

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