Researchers Use Smartwatch To Spy What Users Are Typing On a Keyboard
An anonymous reader writes: Researchers have created an app that follows the micro-movements of your smartwatch and is able to detect what keys you're pressing with your left hand, and guess what words you may be typing on a keyboard. The app developed for the Motion Leaks (MoLe) project only works on a Samsung Gear Live smartwatch, but researchers say that in theory, a similar app could be developed for other smartwatch makes and models.
I doubt that. I'm using the eagle system, circling over the keyboard until I detect the prey (right key) and then I let it fall down on it (or near it) naturally always with the same finger.
It should be easier with touch typists.
Time to add taking off that watch in addition to firing up VPN and private browsing before visiting your favorite adult sites now.
This is an interesting although convoluted method to determine what is being typed. It has already been demonstrated that the acoustics from typing can be used to identify what is being typed. Most smart watches have microphones. It makes more sense to use the microphone right next to the keyboard to capture very high quality audio so close to the source and then analyze it acoustically to determine what was typed (which captures data from BOTH hands). It will also work if the user takes off their watch and lays it nearby.
http://www.cs.berkeley.edu/~ty...
Better known as 318230.
I think they'll detect other kinds of movements made with the left hand.
Fool! You think these scientists haven't thought of that? Of course they have.
The interesting part is that it still captures what the left hand is doing. Some weird entanglement issue, I believe.
If you think I voted for Trump because of this post, you're wrong. I voted for Dr. Jill Stein of the Green Party. Again.