Hackers: We can now steal data via electrical outlet

Sat Jul 11, 2009 5:53PM EDT

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A few years ago, the idea of using nothing more than a standard electrical outlet to hack into sensitive computer systems would be the stuff of Hollywood -- and far-fetched, eye-rolling Hollywood at that.

I can almost picture the scene: A wily Justin Long taps a few keys on his laptop and we watch the signal race through the power grid to his target, where a hapless government employee types his password into the ultra-secure computer at headquarters. Back with Long, we watch the password show up on his computer screen, as if by magic, thanks to his nifty hacking skills.

It sounds ridiculous.

But it turns out, well, it's basically a reality.

At the Black Hat USA conference later this month, hackers are preparing to unveil their methodology to steal information typed on a computer keyboard using nothing more than the power outlet to which the computer is connected.

The technique behind the exploit isn't as wildly high-tech as you might think, though. Old-fashioned electrical properties are the key to the trick. Here's how it works (in simple terms): When you type on a standard computer keyboard, electrical signals run through the cable to the PC. Those cables aren't shielded, so the signal leaks via the ground wire in the cable and into the ground wire on the computer's power supply.

The attacker connects a probe to a nearby power socket (perhaps in the vacant office next door or a hotel room across the hall), detects the ground leakage, and converts the signal back into alphanumeric characters. So far, the attack has proven successful using outlets up to about 15 meters away.

If you've got a wireless keyboard or are working on a laptop unplugged from the wall, which would make this attack useless, fret not: The hackers have a method for eavesdropping on you too. A simple laser beam -- better than a laser pointer, but not by much -- can be pointed a shiny object on the table where the computer sits, and the beam's reflection is captured by a receiving system. The vibration of that reflection caused by the striking of keys can be analyzed and, as with the electrical outlet system described above, reconstructed into words, since every key produces a unique vibration pattern. All this technique requires is a direct line of sight to the PC and a few hundred dollars worth of equipment.

Be safe out there, folks.

Comments on Hackers: We can now steal data via electrical outlet

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  • 6 Posted by irish_trry on Sat Jul 11, 2009 11:07PM EDT Report Abuse

    Come on! You can't possibly be that surprised! Haven't any of you gotten a cable signal (and likely some free extra channels), without having to connect anything but the power source? Bingo! ...irishnphx

  • 7 Posted by bizboy13 on Sun Jul 12, 2009 1:44AM EDT Report Abuse

    It;s called incidental capacitance

  • 8 Posted by alan_r_cam on Sun Jul 12, 2009 4:15AM EDT Report Abuse

    Read Wikipedia for more: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TEMPEST

  • 9 Posted by brozenec on Sun Jul 12, 2009 4:25AM EDT Report Abuse

    This is not the result of a few high school kids hacking away in the basement. Someone spent a lot of time, money and sophisticated resources discovering and developing this technology. Too bad these same people can't develop an efficient solar panel.........or some other useful technology.

  • 10 Posted by creality1 on Sun Jul 12, 2009 7:59AM EDT Report Abuse

    B. S. the fed has been doing this for decades.

  • 11 Posted by ou812bobby on Sun Jul 12, 2009 10:45AM EDT Report Abuse

    OK, It's time to collect all the Hackers, by them An Island, and put them on that island. With crayons and coloring books. Chicago Bob.

  • 12 Posted by robeko1 on Sun Jul 12, 2009 10:54AM EDT Report Abuse

    This is spy technology territory folks, but sooner or later every technology spreads though... Yeah, it is real. Get used to it. As Chris said: "Be safe out there, folks" and use common sense.

  • 14 Posted by j_alexfleury on Sun Jul 12, 2009 12:13PM EDT Report Abuse

    Nikki Don't be naive LOTS of people DONT get caught.

  • 15 Posted by mattfolco on Sun Jul 12, 2009 12:41PM EDT Report Abuse

    @brozenec that's acutally incorrect. it took them about a week using tools they already have. yes, they are skilled engineers, but certainly any entity with funding could develop something quite easily.

  • 16 Posted by monko12105 on Sun Jul 12, 2009 5:27PM EDT Report Abuse

    ya but they wont know what the typing is for so they wont know what the password they stole is for

  • 17 Posted by bella77427 on Sun Jul 12, 2009 6:44PM EDT Report Abuse

    Want to know what I think about those hackers ? For everything they hack off a person's or corporate pc...someone should hack a vital organ from their body. Thou shall not steal. Nevertheless the theory does sound a bit far fetched. What sounds more plausible to me is if they duplicated and or hijacked a specific unit..then the can tell which is using the battery and which isn't then they would know which one to target. I tell you most persons will never appreciate how awful something is until it has been done to them.

  • 18 Posted by werkinkub1 on Sun Jul 12, 2009 11:47PM EDT Report Abuse

    "WE" being ONE of "THEM",, only exploit possibility!! Be careful what you dream.. it may, very simply, become reality..YOUR privacy and protection are YOUR responsibility.. take A class, get smarter, OR GET TAKEN.. WE did.. it isn't that hard,, like learning to speak a different language. support bacteria!! it's the only culture some people will EVER have!!

  • 19 Posted by mpsycho11 on Sun Jul 12, 2009 11:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    I just got screwed thinking I was getting an upgrade. trust no one!

  • 21 Posted by phxsuns598 on Mon Jul 13, 2009 12:46AM EDT Report Abuse

    They would probably be using machine-level mips to do the keystroke hack. I cannot belive that they can write such an amazing program to do that. "Nothing is Impossible."

  • 22 Posted by jmw250 on Mon Jul 13, 2009 10:57AM EDT Report Abuse

    its not that surprising. one of the classic methods of surveillance has been to monitor window vibrations, run the vibrations through an algorithim and interpret what people in a particular room are saying. The counter measure to this has been double-pane glass windows where the air between the panes acts as a vibration insulator.

  • 23 Posted by laceynicolestclair on Tue Jul 14, 2009 2:52PM EDT Report Abuse

    Wierd, I just had a dream last night about someone turning my tv on and off through the power cord. I thought it seemed pretty crazy... but I guess it's those crazy thoughts that create the future.

  • 24 Posted by ahandtoholdonto on Tue Jul 14, 2009 3:13PM EDT Report Abuse

    The truth will be revealed. You are nothing but a brain in a jar inside the Matrix. The electrical current from your brain is feeding an alien race. As your continue to watch idiotic television and read sophmoric articles such as this, your brain will continue to soften until it is mushy mush. And Alec Baldwin, the leader of the aliens, will come with his melon ball scooper and scoop out your brains and gobble them up! Too bad for you!

  • 25 Posted by grsfgsno on Tue Jul 14, 2009 3:56PM EDT Report Abuse

    ok from what I'm guessing is computer language is based on 1's and 0's each letter of the alphabet is assigned its own 1's and 0's so for instance a is 110 and b is 001. each of the letters would produce a different electrical impulse. Hackers can take those electrical impulses record them some how. and play them back on a device/computer that can decode the electrical impulses

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