Your Phone Can Be Snooped On Using Its Gyroscope
stephendavion (2872091) writes Researchers will demonstrate the process used to spy on smartphones using gyroscopes at Usenix Security event on August 22, 2014. Researchers from Stanford and a defense research group at Rafael will demonstrate a way to spy on smartphones using gyroscopes at Usenix Security event on August 22, 2014. According to the "Gyrophone: Recognizing Speech From Gyroscope Signals" study, the gyroscopes integrated into smartphones were sensitive enough to enable some sound waves to be picked up, transforming them into crude microphones.
Can we just succumb to the inevitable and work on building a list of the parts of a smartphone that can't be used to spy on you?
I'm thinking 'maybe the battery door'. Any other suggestions?
the gyroscopes integrated into smartphones were sensitive enough to enable some sound waves to be picked up, transforming them into crude microphones
Yeah, that's why I always stick my phone inside an empty potato chip bag when I'm talking to someone...
Basically an app can ask for permissions for the gyro only (if it even needs to) and be recording conversation.
They are currently able to recognize the spoken digits 1-9 correctly approximately 80% of the time. This is given a training data set from the same speaker and the same phone. Incredibly impressive, especially since it was done from a web browser and requires no special permissions or even knowledge from the user. For those of you that didn't read it. However, James Bond spy tool this is not yet...
I can't help but feel like there are gyroscopes involved in this process somehow...
- First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
Basically an app can ask for permissions for the gyro only (if it even needs to) and be recording conversation.
Yeah, that's the thing. You don't need permissions for the gyro on Android and iOS, so any and all of the apps that you have on your phone or tablet could be using the gyro and you wouldn't know, except for an anomalous battery drain.
Basically an app can ask for permissions for the gyro only (if it even needs to) and be recording conversation.
Yeah, that's the thing. You don't need permissions for the gyro on Android and iOS, so any and all of the apps that you have on your phone or tablet could be using the gyro and you wouldn't know, except for an anomalous battery drain.
Sure, but on iOS an app is suspended when you are on a phone call unless the app has used the system APIs to enable background execution. There are only a small number of background execution modes and your app must declare which it plans to use. When it comes to location-based background execution (the most likely use of the gyro), your app still gets suspended. The system wakes it up periodically and sends location updates to a function in your app and then gives the app a small time window for that function to return an expected value. It is very much a discrete task-based multitasking system - completely different than normal desktop machines. Good sometimes. Bad sometimes.
Every app seems to want access to your full memory, location info, camera, microphone and contact list. Why does a flashlight app need all this?
I carry a phone because I have to for work, and I need something to read while on the crapper, and that's it. People who use all these fancy apps are the product, not the customer.
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.