Hijacked headphones could be listening to your private moments right now
HACKERS could hijack your headphones to slyly record your secret conversations, researchers have warned.
By
developing a prototype code that uses a unique form of malware, Israeli
security researchers from Ben Gurion University demonstrated how
software could convert headphones into microphones to eavesdrop on the
user.
Headphone speakers convert electromagnetic signals into sound waves through a membrane’s vibrations.
The
malware works by programming these membranes to work in reverse and
convert the vibrations in the air back into electromagnetic signals to
capture the audio of someone using a headset from across a room.
Using
this experimental method, which they have subsequently named
“Speake(a)r”, the researchers were able to show how it’s possible to
hijack a device to record audio even when its microphones have been
disabled, or even completely removed.
The Ben Gurion researchers were able to make this a possibility due
to a vulnerability in RealTek audio codec chips - the stuff that makes
your computer software compatible with the audio hardware - to retask
the computer’s output channel as an input channel, allowing the malware
to record audio even when the headphones don’t even have a microphone
channel on their plug, or are connected to an output-only audio jack.
As
the RealTek chips are very common in most modern desktops and laptops,
the researchers claim their prototyped attack will work on practically
any computer, be it Windows or MacOS.
The article was published on : news.com.au
Post a Comment