U.S. CISA adds a Microsoft SharePoint Server flaw to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog|430,000 FortiGate Devices Exposed in FortiBleed Ransomware Link|Adobe fixed multiple maximum-severity flaws in ColdFusion and Campaign Classic|Alleged Scattered Spider Hacker Extradited to U.S. to Face Cybercrime Charges|Oracle E-Business Suite Flaw Under Active Attack, 950 Systems Exposed|Azure CLI Targeted in LSHIY Password Spray Campaign Across 64 Orgs|CISA Warns BlueHammer Flaw Is Now Exploited in Ransomware Attacks|RustDuck: The Botnet That’s Still Small but Engineering Like It Plans to Grow|GuardFall Flaw Hits 10 of 11 Popular Open-Source AI Agents|XSS.is, The Forum That Ran the Ransomware Supply Chain Is Down. The Market Isn’t|U.S. CISA adds SimpleHelp flaw to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog|Hackers Steal Data of 4.38 Million Aflac Japan Customers|U.S. CISA adds a Microsoft SharePoint Server flaw to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog|430,000 FortiGate Devices Exposed in FortiBleed Ransomware Link|Adobe fixed multiple maximum-severity flaws in ColdFusion and Campaign Classic|Alleged Scattered Spider Hacker Extradited to U.S. to Face Cybercrime Charges|Oracle E-Business Suite Flaw Under Active Attack, 950 Systems Exposed|Azure CLI Targeted in LSHIY Password Spray Campaign Across 64 Orgs|CISA Warns BlueHammer Flaw Is Now Exploited in Ransomware Attacks|RustDuck: The Botnet That’s Still Small but Engineering Like It Plans to Grow|GuardFall Flaw Hits 10 of 11 Popular Open-Source AI Agents|XSS.is, The Forum That Ran the Ransomware Supply Chain Is Down. The Market Isn’t|U.S. CISA adds SimpleHelp flaw to its Known Exploited Vulnerabilities catalog|Hackers Steal Data of 4.38 Million Aflac Japan Customers|
Advertisement

Ad Placeholder

Full Width × 90

Breaking News

Experts devised a method to capture keystrokes during Skype calls

A group of security experts discovered that the Microsoft Skype Messaging service exposes user keystrokes during a conversation. A group of researchers from the University of California Irvine (UCI) and two Italian Universities discovered that the popular Skype Messaging service expose user keystrokes during a call. The researchers have devised a method to record the acoustic emanations of […]

Experts devised a method to capture keystrokes during Skype calls

A group of security experts discovered that the Microsoft Skype Messaging service exposes user keystrokes during a conversation.

A group of researchers from the University of California Irvine (UCI) and two Italian Universities discovered that the popular Skype Messaging service expose user keystrokes during a call.

The researchers have devised a method to record the acoustic emanations of computer keyboards during a Skype call in order to reassemble them as a text.

skype-calls-attack

The method leverage on the profiling of the user’s typing style and doesn’t request a proximity to the victim in order to capture keystrokes.

The experts devised a new keyboard acoustic eavesdropping attack based on Voice-over-IP (VoIP).

The VoIP software is able to eavesdrop acoustic emanations of pressed keystrokes and transmits them to the interlocutors involved in the VoIP call.

The attack is possible because each brand of keyboards emis distinct sounds, such as the various letters on the same keyboard. The technique presented by the researchers is able to discriminate these sounds and discover the typed text with an accuracy that depends on the knowledge of the user’s typing style.

Clearly, this attack poses a serious threat to the users’ privacy.

According to the researchers, Skype conveys enough audio information to allow attackers to reconstruct the victim’s input with an accuracy of 91.7% when it is known the target typing style.

“In fact, we show that very popular VoIP software (Skype) conveys enough audio information to reconstruct the victim’s input – keystrokes typed on the remote keyboard.” states the paper published by the experts. “In particular, our results demonstrate that, given some knowledge on the victim’s typing style and the keyboard, the attacker attains top-5 accuracy of 91.7% in guessing a random key pressed by the victim. (The accuracy goes down to still alarming 41.89% if the attacker is oblivious to both the typing style and the keyboard).”

The researchers highlighted that the attack is not effective when the victim uses a touchscreen or a and keypad.

The real element of innovation for this technique is the fact that VoIP technology allows bypassing the need to be in proximity of the victim that was requested by other techniques.

[adrotate banner=”9″]

Pierluigi Paganini

(Security Affairs – Skype calls, eavesdropping)