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Air-Gapped Computer Hacked (Again)

An anonymous reader writes: Researchers from Ben Gurion University managed to extract GSM signals from air gapped computers using only a simple cellphone. According to Yuval Elovici, head of the University’s Cyber Security Research Center, the air gap exploit works because of the fundamental way that computers put out low levels of electromagnetic radiation. The attack requires both the targeted computer and the mobile phone to have malware installed on them. Once the malware has been installed on the targeted computer, the attack exploits the natural capabilities of each device to exfiltrate data using electromagnetic radiation.

3 of 80 comments (clear)

  1. Old news is so exciting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This just in, TEMPEST is a thing. Again.

    1. Re:Old news is so exciting by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It isn't conceptually novel; but doing a practical TEMPEST attack with nothing but a dumbphone, with a fairly unobtrusive software modification, rather than a relatively classy SDR rig or some antenna-covered fed-van is a nice practical refinement.

      Really, how many 'tech news' stories are actually conceptually novel, rather than "Thing you could lease from IBM for the GDP of a small country in the 60s and 70s, or buy from Sun or SGI for somewhere between the price of a new house and the price of a new car in the 80s and early 90s, is now available in a battery powered and pocket sized device that shows ads!" Conceptual novelty has a special place, of course; but one ought not to scorn engineering refinement.

  2. "If you install x on both computers...." by jafiwam · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is just a new way to make a very slow, very crappy network connection via unexpected hardware.

    "Hacking" has SOME meaning ya dummies. It implies that there isn't a willful participant at one end and the data breech happened anyway.

    Whatever this is... it isn't 'hacking'.