Chances are, if your computer is hooked up to the Internet, via a
wire or wirelessly, you are vulnerable to hackers.Physically isolating
the computer is one way to protect against such nefarious activities,
and in the realm of cybersecurity, taking such anti-surveillance
measures creates what’s known as an “air gap.” The only way the device’s
security can be breached is if someone physically plants a bug on the
machine via a USB drive, for example.
Researchers have developed a proof-of-concept
that can infiltrate a closed network to lift data from a machine that
has been kept completely isolated from the internet or any Wi-Fi
connection by using little more than a mobile phone’s FM radio signals.
Researcher Mordechai Guri, along with Professor Yuval Elovici of Ben
Gurion University, presented the research on Thursday in the 9th IEEE
International Conference on Malicious and Unwanted Software (MALCON
2014) held at Denver.This new technology is known as ‘AirHopper’ —
basically a keylogger app to track what is being typed on the computer
or the mobile phone.
AirHopper is a special type of keylogger because it uses radio
frequencies to transmit data from a computer, all by exploiting the
computer’s monitor display, in order to evade air-gap security measures.
“This is the first time that a mobile phone is considered
in an attack model as the intended receiver of maliciously crafted
radio signals emitted from the screen of the isolated computer,”
according to a release by Ben Gurion University.
“AirHopper demonstrates how textual and binary data can be
exfiltrated from physically a (sic) isolated computer to mobile phones
at a distance of 1-7 meters, with effective bandwidth of 13-60 (bytes
per second). Enough to steal a secret password.”
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar