The risk lies in the motion sensors used by these wearable devices. The sensors also collect information about your hand movements among other data, making it possible for "attackers to reproduce the trajectories" of your hand and "recover secret key entries."
In the paper released by semanticscholar.org, titled "Friend or Foe?: Your Wearable Devices Reveal Your Personal PIN," computer scientists from the Stevens Institute of Technology and Binghamton University used a computeralgorithm that can guess your password and PIN with about 80% success rate on the first attempt, and over 90% of the time with 3 tries. .
Researchers say their "Backward PIN-Sequence Inference" algorithm can be used to capture anything a person type on any keyboard – from automatic teller machine or ATM keypads to mobile keypads – through infected smartwatches, even if the person makes the slight hand movements while entering PINs.
Electrical and computer engineering professor Yingying Chen and three of her graduate students carried out the tests in Stevens labs, assisted by Stevens alumnus Yan Wang Ph.D. '15, now a professor at Binghamton University.
"There are two kinds of potential attacks here: sniffing attacks and internal attacks," explains Chen. "An adversary can place a wireless 'sniffer' close to a key-based security system and eavesdrop sensor data from wearable devices. Or, in an internal attack, an adversary accesses sensors in the devices via malware. The malware waits until the victim accesses a key-based security system to collect the sensor data."
Although the researchers do not name specific wearable devices that are vulnerable, they note that attackers can record information about your hand movements...Either directly by infecting your wearable device with malware or remotely by intercepting the Bluetooth connection that links your wearable device to your phone.
A low-tech approach – Always enter your passwords or PINs with the hand that is not having a wearable device with the highly sophisticated motion tracker.
Source: SemanticScholar, Phys.org,
Hackers Can Steal Your ATM PIN from Your Weardable Device
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