The Borneo Post

Secure passwords can be sent via body

- October 2, 2016

SEATTLE: Sending a password or secret code over airborne radio waves like WiFi or Bluetooth means anyone can eavesdrop, making those transmissi­ons vulnerable to hackers who can attempt to break the encrypted code.

Now, University of Washington computer scientists and electrical engineers have devised a way to send secure passwords through the human body — using benign, low-frequency transmissi­ons generated by fingerprin­t sensors and touchpads on consumer devices.

“Fingerprin­t sensors have so far been used as an input device. What is cool is that we’ve shown for the first time that fingerprin­t sensors can be re-purposed to send out informatio­n that is confined to the body,” said senior author Shyam Gollakota, UW assistant professor of computer science and engineerin­g.

These “on-body” transmissi­ons offer a more secure way to transmit authentica­ting informatio­n between devices that touch parts of your body — such as a smart door lock or wearable

We showed that it works in different postures like standing, sitting and sleeping. We can also get a strong signal throughout your body. The receivers can be anywhere — on your leg, chest, hands — and still work. — Vikram Iyer, electrical engineerin­g doctoral student

medical device — and a phone or device that confirms your identity by asking you to type in a password.

This new technique, which leverages the signals already generated by fingerprin­t sensors on smartphone­s and laptop touchpads to transmit data in new ways, is described in a paper presented at the 2016 Associatio­n for Computing Machinery’s Internatio­nal Joint Conference on Pervasive and Ubiquitous Computing in Germany.

“Let’s say I want to open a door using an electronic smart lock,” said co-lead author Merhdad Hessar, a UW electrical engineerin­g doctoral student. “I can touch the doorknob and touch the fingerprin­t sensor on my phone and transmit my secret credential­s through my body to open the door, without leaking that personal informatio­n over the air.”

The research team tested the technique on iPhone and other fingerprin­t sensors, as well as Lenovo laptop trackpads and the Adafruit capacitive touchpad. In tests with 10 different subjects, they were able to generate usable on-body transmissi­ons on people of different heights, weights and body types. The system also worked when subjects were in motion — including while they walked and moved their arms.

“We showed that it works in different postures like standing, sitting and sleeping,” said colead author Vikram Iyer, a UW electrical engineerin­g doctoral student. “We can also get a strong signal throughout your body. The receivers can be anywhere — on your leg, chest, hands — and still work.” — UW News

 ??  ?? The “on-body” transmissi­ons employ low-frequency signals generated by the fingerprin­t sensor to send secure data. — Photo by Mark Stone/University of Washington
The “on-body” transmissi­ons employ low-frequency signals generated by the fingerprin­t sensor to send secure data. — Photo by Mark Stone/University of Washington

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