Slashdot Mirror


Laptops And Flat Panels Now Vulnerable to Van Eck Methods

An anonymous reader writes "Using radio to eavesdrop on CRTs has been around since the 80s, but Cambridge University researchers have now shown that laptops and flat-panel displays are vulnerable too. Using basic radio equipment and an FPGA board totaling less than $2,000 it was possible for researchers to read text from a laptop three offices away. 'Kuhn also mentioned that one laptop was vulnerable because it had metal hinges that carried the signal of the display cable. I asked if you could alter a device to make it easier to spy on. "There are a lot of innocuous modifications you can make to maximize the chance of getting a good signal," he told me. For example, adding small pieces of wire or cable to a display could make a big difference.'"

11 of 144 comments (clear)

  1. An ounce of prevention by L.+VeGas · · Score: 5, Funny

    adding small pieces of wire or cable to a display could make a big difference That's why I always carefully remove all the wires from all my electronics.
  2. HDMI? by jandrese · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I wonder if they're just reading the signals that are being sent over the wire? With analog signals this is pretty easy to to, but with DVI it's a lot harder, and way harder still if the signal is encrypted. With the future of display technologies appearing to be heading as close as possible to encryption to the eyeballs, it makes me wonder how long this will remain viable.

    --

    I read the internet for the articles.
  3. Bypassing DRM by harry666t · · Score: 5, Funny

    Maybe this technique could be used to bypass that DRM stuff and capture movies etc right from the screen, how do you think about it?

  4. less social intelligence than a 13 year old by circletimessquare · · Score: 5, Funny

    "i have a friend, ehem, who is worried about this kind of hack, ehem, and i was, i mean he was, wondering what he could do to..."

    "guard against it?"

    "no, no, what he could do to... um, make sure the 'bad guys' haven't modified his system, ehem, like, what would a bad guy do to make this work better so he could do it, i mean, so he could have an idea of the kind of modifications to look out for?"

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  5. Re:ch0wned! by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I wonder if this could be used (at close range to reduce errors) for the only remaining analog hole

    The MPAA will be furious!

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
  6. BEHOLD ! I am TEMPEST, they LORD and MASTER by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny



    BEHOLD ! I am TEMPEST, thy LORD and MASTER ! Bow before ME ! Fear ME ! I see ALL*!

    *its a bit fuzzy, like snowy tv - BUT I SEE ALL !! FEAR ME !!!

  7. At last! by ThanatosMinor · · Score: 5, Funny

    I can spend $2000 to be able to read my laptop that's across the room while I'm still in bed. Now all I need is some sort of glove I can hook up to a robotic arm so it can type for me. Or better yet, I can invent a fing-longer!

    Sigh If only they would make a portable version of my laptop...

  8. The Offical Howto by pak9rabid · · Score: 5, Funny

    Step one, cut a hole in a box Step two, put your antenna in that box Step three, make her open the box Whoops, scratch that last step

  9. Article Polls! by mobby_6kl · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Holy shit, I just now noticed that this article has its own poll, how awesome is that!

    My first reaction was "WTF did the relatively recent end-of-civ poll go" and then when I voted it showed this article's comment under the poll results, which was another WTF moment. When was this feature added/first used? I can already see great use for the article polls, for example the editors could try to guess the popular tags and use them for poll items.
    • Yes
    • No
    • Hellno
    • Its
    • Chairthrowing
    • CowboyNeal
  10. Oh bull by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    No one knew? That's utter nonsense. I noticed that my laptop lcd monitor would cause interferce at times on my FM radio seven years ago, depending on what it was doing, and what station I was listening to.

    That's a pretty big red flag that these suckers were subject to Van Eck.

    And if the NSA could hear Scott McNealy's friggin keyboard outside in the parking lot (as they later told him during a meeting in the late 1990's), you'd better believe that the NSA has had LCD monitor reading capability for at least that long.

    Just because it's not in the popular press, or published papers, hardly means that no one knew. The only thing surprising here is that it took so long for someone to get a paper out it.

    I don't mean to disparage the researchers, who deserve a lot of credit to finally bringing this to public knowledge, but this is really low-hanging fruit.

  11. Yes, we've known for a decade by billstewart · · Score: 5, Interesting
    ... i.e. just about as long as laptops have been usable. Wireless eavesdropping and TEMPEST issues were a common discussion topic back in the Cypherpunks era, among the technical experts as well as among the tinfoil hat crowd, and a number of us had worked with TEMPEST professionally.

    My ~1995 laptop (486? Pentium 60? MHz) would display on my parents' TV screen when I visited them. (No, I didn't live in their basement, I'd just avoided having a TV in my house back then:-) It wasn't in sync, so there were three partial screen images scrolling slowly, and there weren't enough pixels, but it was readable enough to be obvious that a real receiver would be able to display the output cleanly. My guess was that the culprit wasn't really the LCD drivers, but the auxiliary VGA port on the back of the laptop; I no longer remember if I tried turning that on and off, or exactly which laptop model it was, but Google probably knows.


    The real difficulties are getting enough focus to only grab signals from the laptop you're looking for, and not all the other CRTs and TVs and LCDs around, which is why you're reading an interview with an expert like Markus Kuhn and not just some 1337 k1dd13z, and doing so without parking a big antennaful van on the street in front of your target.


    If you look at the real security threats here, there are two sides -

    • Crackers trolling for whatever they can find, like passwords and credit card numbers they can abuse, who are willing to eavesdrop on anybody nearby, such as people in an airport
    • Cops and spooks and secret police who are targeting *you*, in which case you've got much more serious security problems than whether your laptop screen can be eavesdropped.
    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks