Just in:
Why your AI transformation can fail — and it’s not the technology // Taiwan International Plant-Based Festival Launches in Singapore: High-End Culinary Partnerships and Diplomatic Exhibitions Shape Premium Agri-Product Branding // France and Oman press toll-free Hormuz passage // DSQ Real Estate Highlights Post-Purchase Advisory as a Growing Need for Overseas Dubai Property Owners // OpenAI limits Sol launch amid cyber risks // ClawHub breach exposes agent marketplace risk // Binzhou’s Leap from Manufacturing to Intelligent Manufacturing // China’s digital hub Hangzhou hosts conference on AI, OPC // Bid To Rebuild Bengal To Its Old Glory Is Welcome, Though Difficult // World’s First Commercial Multimodal LLM for Cultural Tourism Enters Broad Application // Bangladesh-China Joint Statement On Teesta Cooperation Poses A Big Challenge To India // CG Capital, the Leader in Branded Residences in Thailand, Marks Milestone Success for InterContinental Residences Bangkok Asoke Amid Global Economic Uncertainty // Save the Children Hong Kong’s Play to Thrive: Prioritising Personal Growth Over Competitive Success // Masdar starts Kazakh wind power push // Cheap RAT spreads through Telegram channels // Payments giants back shared Open USD stablecoin // Afogreen Build Highlights Growing Adoption of Building Performance Modelling in Australia’s Sustainability-Driven Construction Sector // PRHK 2026 Benchmark Report highlights how Hong Kong’s IPO revival, AI, and the GBA are reshaping the SAR’s PR industry // This summer will never stop us from our wellness routine // 5 Law Firms Making a Difference in Cincinnati //

Watch Out! Your Smartwatch Can Divulge Your Passwords and ATM PIN

Typing PIN numbers and passwords into a smartwatch or similar wearable can leave you vulnerable to hackers, according to researchers from Binghamton University and the Stevens Institute of Technology. The researchers found that it’s possible for attackers to figure out secret access codes by tracking and measuring “fine-grained” hand movements used when inputting security information into wearable devices.

In 5,000 key-entry tests for three different security systems over nearly a year, the researchers found they were able to successfully crack 80 percent of PINs and passwords on the first try. With three tries, the accuracy of the hacks rose to more than 90 percent.

Because there’s no immediate way to avoid such vulnerabilities with wearables, the researchers said that it’s probably best not to enter security data into such devices if there’s any chance of being observed either directly or remotely.

ADVERTISEMENT

The researchers also suggested that developers find ways to “inject a certain type of noise” into wearable data so the devices can still be used effectively to count steps or monitor other physical activities without giving away the finer hand motions involved in typing.

‘Sophisticated’ Two-Pronged Attack Method

Yan Wang, an assistant professor of computer science at New York state’s Binghamton University, described the team’s findings in a paper titled, “Friend or Foe? Your Wearable Devices Reveal Your Personal PIN.” Presented recently at the annual Association for Computing Machinery Asia Conference on Computer and Communications Security in China, the paper was co-authored with Stevens Institute lead researcher Yingying Chen and colleagues Chen Wang, Xiaonan Guo and Bo Liu.

Wang said there are two ways a hacker can monitor a wearable owner’s hand movements to figure out PINs and passwords: an internal attack that uses malware to access data from embedded sensors in a device; and an external hack employing a wireless sniffer to pick up Bluetooth signals sent between a wearable and an associated smartphone. “The threat is real, although the approach is sophisticated,” Wang said in a Binghamton University statement.

The team’s research earned a “Best Paper Award” at the China conference. The investigation was funded in part by a grant from the National Science Foundation and the U.S. Army Research Office.

Cracking Security With ‘Alarming Accuracy’

Wearables, such as smartwatches, usually contain a variety of internal sensors that monitor different movements and device orientations. These sensors can include accelerometers, gyroscopes and magnetometers.

The Binghamton-Stevens Institute researchers developed a “Backward PIN-sequence Inference Algorithm” that they applied to the millimeter-scale motions detected by such sensors. The algorithm enabled them to estimate the distances and directions between successive keystrokes, which then allowed them to determine PINs and passwords with “alarming accuracy.”

Such vulnerabilities raise security concerns not only for fitness trackers and smartwatches, but for other health and medical devices whose size and computing power often don’t allow for robust security measures, the researchers said. In addition to injecting more noise into data from wearables to reduce the risks of such hacking, device developers should also work on improving encryption of data traveling between wearables and host devices, usually smartphones.

This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service – if this is your content and you’re reading it on someone else’s site, please read the FAQ at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php#publishers.
Recommended article from FiveFilters.org: Most Labour MPs in the UK Are Revolting.



Notice an issue?

Arabian Post strives to deliver the most accurate and reliable information to its readers. If you believe you have identified an error or inconsistency in this article, please don't hesitate to contact our editorial team at editor[at]thearabianpost[dot]com. We are committed to promptly addressing any concerns and ensuring the highest level of journalistic integrity.


ADVERTISEMENT
Social Media Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com
Just in:
Payments giants back shared Open USD stablecoin // Cheap RAT spreads through Telegram channels // XRG and Eni deepen Argentina LNG push // Why your AI transformation can fail — and it’s not the technology // Bid To Rebuild Bengal To Its Old Glory Is Welcome, Though Difficult // World’s First Commercial Multimodal LLM for Cultural Tourism Enters Broad Application // China’s digital hub Hangzhou hosts conference on AI, OPC // ClawHub breach exposes agent marketplace risk // Alibaba Cloud gains edge in agentic AI race // 5 Law Firms Making a Difference in Cincinnati // This summer will never stop us from our wellness routine // Afogreen Build Highlights Growing Adoption of Building Performance Modelling in Australia’s Sustainability-Driven Construction Sector // France and Oman press toll-free Hormuz passage // Bangladesh-China Joint Statement On Teesta Cooperation Poses A Big Challenge To India // Bracell Welcomes Fernando Branco’s Appointment to Lead ABAF and Reinforces Commitment to Sustainable Forestry Development in Bahia // Dubai advances Gold Line contractor race // CG Capital, the Leader in Branded Residences in Thailand, Marks Milestone Success for InterContinental Residences Bangkok Asoke Amid Global Economic Uncertainty // DSQ Real Estate Highlights Post-Purchase Advisory as a Growing Need for Overseas Dubai Property Owners // Masdar starts Kazakh wind power push // BateriHub, Global Energy Battery Partner MNA Metal to Tighten Malaysia’s Used Battery Recycling Chain //