Doesn't sound much untill you see reports of passwords for servers being morse-code imprinted onto the time span between network packets.
Is this hypothetical or verified?
Doesn't sound much untill you see reports of passwords for servers being morse-code imprinted onto the time span between network packets.
some tiny binary in mouse or keyboard firmware, HDMI ends on random cables
The FBI can do this in the US. It's called the USA PATRIOT (Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism) act. Newspeak at it's finest.I can speak as 'insider' on this topic, as much as I am able to.
You're fully correct. In EU the court can impose active or passive measures of monitoring against a possible criminal in a lawful investigation. The same way the court would allow snoops to wiretap somebody decades ago, or enter his home to place a bug.
The bugs today are in the peripherals and if the target is high profile or high complexity to warrant active measures against them, the specialists will enter their premises and replace the peripherals with bugged ones. Keyboards are the prime target.
There was a talk about that some years ago on the CCC congress. I would need to dig trough the archives. Maybe it was the "to protect and infect" ones, if not those then most likely that year. But those two will give you pause to thibk what was done years ago, and what is being done todayIs this hypothetical or verified?
Apparantly high definition optical mouse can be used as a microphone!
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How your mouse could eavesdrop and rat you out
: Mic-E-Mouse can roar by literally vibe hacking speechwww.theregister.com
It struck me after reading that, if they can record voice, they can record keyboard sounds too. Which reminded me of this:-
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The sound of you typing on your keyboard could reveal your password
Researchers have found a way to guess passwords from keyboard sounds recorded by a smartphone with 95% accuracy.www.malwarebytes.com
Not that I'm paraoind...![]()