http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/134682-hackers-backdoor-the-human-brain-successfully-extract-sensitive-data
@see http://ceh.fav.cc/tag/hackers/
With a chilling hint of the
not-so-distant future, researchers at the Usenix Security conference
have demonstrated a zero-day vulnerability in your brain. Using
a commercial off-the-shelf brain-computer interface, the researchers
have shown that it’s possible to hack your brain, forcing you to reveal
information that you’d rather keep secret.
As we’ve covered in the past, a brain-computer interface
is a two-part device: There’s the hardware — which is usually a headset
(an EEG; an electroencephalograph) with sensors that rest on your scalp
— and software, which processes your brain activity and tries to work
out what you’re trying to do (turn left, double click, open box, etc.)
BCIs are generally used in a medical setting with very expensive
equipment, but in the last few years cheaper, commercial offerings have
emerged. For $200-300, you can buy an Emotiv (pictured above) or
Neurosky BCI, go through a short training process, and begin mind
controlling your computer.
Both
of these commercial BCIs have an API — an interface that allows
developers to use the BCI’s output in their own programs. In this case,
the security researchers — from the Universities of Oxford and Geneva,
and the University of California, Berkeley — created a custom program
that was specially designed with the sole purpose of finding out
sensitive data, such as the location of your home, your debit card PIN,
which bank you use, and your date of birth. The researchers tried out
their program on 28 participants (who were cooperative and didn’t know
that they were being brain-hacked), and in general the experiments had a
10 to 40% chance of success of obtaining useful information (pictured
above).
To
extract this information, the researchers rely on what’s known as the
P300 response — a very specific brainwave pattern (pictured right) that
occurs when you recognize something that is meaningful (a person’s
face), or when you recognize something that fits your current task (a
hammer in the shed). The researchers basically designed a program that
flashes up pictures of maps, banks, and card PINs, and makes a note
every time your brain experiences a P300. Afterwards, it’s easy to pore
through the data and work out — with fairly good accuracy — where a
person banks, where they live, and so on.
In
a real-world scenario, the researchers foresee a game that is specially
tailored by hackers to extract sensitive information from your brain —
or perhaps an attack vector that also uses social engineering to lull
you into a false sense of security. It’s harder to extract data from
someone who knows they’re being attacked — as interrogators and
torturers well know.
Moving forward, this brain hack can only
improve in efficacy as BCIs become cheaper, more accurate, and thus more
extensively used. Really, your only defense is to not think about the
topic — but if you’re proactively on the defensive, then the hacker has
already messed up. The only viable solution that I can think of is to
ensure that you don’t use your brain-computer interface with shady
software, brain malware — but then again, in a
science-fictional future, isn’t it almost guaranteed that the government
would mandate the inclusion of brain-hacking software in the operating
system itself?
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