Hacking

Hacking mobile via hidden voice commands embedded in YouTube videos

A group of researchers has devised a new method for hacking mobile devices by using hidden voice commands in YouTube videos.

A group of researchers from the University of California, Berkeley, and Georgetown University has devised a method for hacking mobile devices by using hidden voice commands embedded in YouTube videos.

In order to hack the mobile device, the victim only has to view a specific crafted YouTube video containing hidden commands. The victim can view the video from multiple nearby sources, including a laptop, a computer, a smart TV, a smartphone or a tablet.

The hidden commands are received by Google Now or Siri personal assistant that filter them from noise and sounds and execute them.

The researchers published the details of the technique for hacking mobile devices in a paper titled “Hidden Voice Commands.”

“We explore in this paper how they can be attacked with hidden voice commands that are unintelligible to human listeners but which are interpreted as commands by devices. We evaluate these attacks under two different threat models.” states the introduction of the project. “In the black-box model, an attacker uses the speech recognition system as an opaque oracle. We show that the adversary can produce difficult to understand commands that are effective against existing systems in the black-box model. Under the white-box model, the attacker has full knowledge of the internals of the speech recognition system and uses it to create attack commands that we demonstrate through user testing are not understandable by humans. We then evaluate several defenses, including notifying the user when a voice command is accepted; a verbal challenge-response protocol; and a machine learning approach that can detect our attacks with 99.8% accuracy.”

A similar attack was already devised by the Intelligence French agency ANSSI in October 2015 when a team of experts discovered that a hacker can completely control mobile devices from as far as 16 feet away.

The hackers can remotely hack a smartphone by silently transmitting radio commands to the voice control systems implemented by both Apple and Google, the Apple’s Siri and Android’s Google Now.

The hack was working only if the targeted device has the headphones plugged into its jack, under these conditions the attack works without even speaking a word.

“The possibility of inducing parasitic signals on the audio front-end of voice-command-capable devices could raise critical security impacts,” the two French researchers, José Lopes Esteves and Chaouki Kasmi, explained in a paper published by the IEEE.

The hack utilized:

  • A mobile device, an iPhone or Android handset, that need to have headphones plugged into the jack.
  • A radio transmitter.

Returning to the present, the researchers have published a video PoC of the black box attack being carried out in presence of background noise with the target phone kept at a distance on 10.1 ft away from the speakers used to play the attack audio.

The attackers can hide several types of commands in the videos, including instructions to download and install a malicious code from a certain host.

Researchers also suggest a series of countermeasures, including a notification every time a voice command is received by the mobile or the adoption of a verbal challenge-response system.

For further technical details give a look to the project’s official website.

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Pierluigi Paganini

(Security Affairs – hacking mobile phone, Hidden Voice Commands)

Pierluigi Paganini

Pierluigi Paganini is member of the ENISA (European Union Agency for Network and Information Security) Threat Landscape Stakeholder Group and Cyber G7 Group, he is also a Security Evangelist, Security Analyst and Freelance Writer. Editor-in-Chief at "Cyber Defense Magazine", Pierluigi is a cyber security expert with over 20 years experience in the field, he is Certified Ethical Hacker at EC Council in London. The passion for writing and a strong belief that security is founded on sharing and awareness led Pierluigi to find the security blog "Security Affairs" recently named a Top National Security Resource for US. Pierluigi is a member of the "The Hacker News" team and he is a writer for some major publications in the field such as Cyber War Zone, ICTTF, Infosec Island, Infosec Institute, The Hacker News Magazine and for many other Security magazines. Author of the Books "The Deep Dark Web" and “Digital Virtual Currency and Bitcoin”.

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