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Hackers Can Use Lasers to ‘Speak’ to Your Amazon Echo or Google Home

wired.com

27 points by MekaiGS 6 years ago · 6 comments

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yummypaint 6 years ago

Should be possible to check if its the thermal mechanism by looking at the frequency response. Should act like a low pass filter because of the mics thermal mass. If the response is flat i agree with Horrowitz that its probably leaking into chip packaging. The fact that IR light still works suggests to me that it's the mic heating up.

pontifier 6 years ago

My money is on the photoacoustic effect. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photoacoustic_effect

Accujack 6 years ago

If you have a third party controlled voice device online in your home that controls anything other than the lights and what music to play, you're a fool who deserves what you get.

No consumer IOT device is secure enough to totally control either your safety or security, period.

  • yellowapple 6 years ago

    > you're a fool

    Yeah, fair, but...

    > who deserves what you get

    ...whoa there, pardner. Nobody deserves to be the victim of burglary/robbery simply for being uninformed or naïve. Relatively few people really understand the implications of this sort of technology. I don't hold that against them. I take it as a learning/teaching opportunity instead.

    Besides, who the hell would've guessed you could work these things silently and from long range with lasers?

  • atonse 6 years ago

    HomeKit doesn't let you "unlock" something without unlocking your device first.

TheEndless 6 years ago

coming to a spy movie near you!

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