From Fox6News Report: Covert Mobile Malware Channels:
Researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham have discovered a new, subtle way for evildoers to take control of your smartphone: through ambient sound and light. Eep.
This isn’t a hack so much as a trigger; for it to work, malware already has to be installed on your phone. But the research finds that, once certain kinds of malware is installed, it can be triggered or controlled with hidden messages, undetectable to humans, embedded within innocuous sounds or lights. Music, music videos, and light from the TV could call previously-installed malware to action or tell it what to do.
The research paper “Sensing-Enabled Channels for Hard-to-Detect Command and control of Mobile Devices” was presented in China by Sharms Zawoad.
Can Songs Trigger Malware?
Announcements
CAS News
May 31, 2013
More News
-
Graduate found her people and her purpose at UABUAB’s commencement marks the close of one chapter for Deason as she steps away from her role as a Friend of Blaze and leaves behind a legacy of Blazer spirit and service. -
A multidisciplinary mindset: Graduate Brianna Dotson reflects on her UAB journeyWhen Brianna Dotson walks across the commencement stage, she will graduate from the University of Alabama at Birmingham with a multidisciplinary academic focus, earning a major in Psychology and minors in African American Studies and Public Health. Here, she reflects with CAS on her college experience. -
Rakshith Ramdas leads with purpose and leaves mark at UABAs he prepares to graduate, Rakshith Ramdas reflects on his opportunities with CAS and shares more about the doors opened for him at UAB.