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Home / Business

With a laser, researchers say they can hack Alexa, Google Home or Siri

By Nicole Perlroth
New York Times·
5 Nov, 2019 10:00 PM5 mins to read

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Researchers have found a way to take over voice-assisted devices like Apple's Siri by shining a light at their microphones. Photo / Haruka Sakaguchi, The New York Times

Researchers have found a way to take over voice-assisted devices like Apple's Siri by shining a light at their microphones. Photo / Haruka Sakaguchi, The New York Times

Since voice-controlled digital assistants were introduced a few years ago, security experts have fretted that systems like Apple's Siri and Amazon's Alexa were a privacy threat and could be easily hacked.

But the risk presented by a cleverly pointed light was probably not on anyone's radar.

Researchers in Japan and at the University of Michigan said Monday that they had found a way to take over Google Home, Amazon's Alexa or Apple's Siri devices from hundreds of feet away by shining laser pointers, and even flashlights, at the devices' microphones.

In one case, they said they opened a garage door by shining a laser beam at a voice assistant that was connected to it. They also climbed 40 metres to the top of a bell tower at the University of Michigan and successfully controlled a Google Home device on the fourth floor of an office building 70 metres away. And by focusing their lasers using a telephoto lens, they said, they were able to hijack a voice assistant more than 100 metres away.

Opening the garage door was easy, the researchers said. With the light commands, the researchers could have hijacked any digital smart systems attached to the voice-controlled assistants.

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They said they could have easily switched light switches on and off, made online purchases or opened a front door protected by a smart lock. They even could have remotely unlocked or started a car that was connected to the device.

"This opens up an entirely new class of vulnerabilities," said Kevin Fu, an associate professor of electrical engineering and computer science at the University of Michigan. "It's difficult to know how many products are affected because this is so basic."

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The computer science and electrical engineering researchers — Takeshi Sugawara at the University of Electro-Communications in Japan; and Fu, Daniel Genkin, Sara Rampazzi and Benjamin Cyr at the University of Michigan — released their findings in a paper Monday.

Genkin was also one of the researchers responsible for discovering two major security flaws, known as Meltdown and Spectre, in the microprocessors inside nearly all the world's computers last year. Shares of chipmaker Intel briefly dropped 5% on news of their discovery.

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The researchers, who studied the light flaw for seven months, said they had discovered that the microphones in the devices would respond to light as if it were sound. Inside each microphone is a small plate called a diaphragm that moves when sound hits it.

That movement can be replicated by focusing a laser or a flashlight at the diaphragm, which converts it into electric signals, they said. The rest of the system then responds the way it would to sound.

The researchers said they had notified Tesla, Ford, Amazon, Apple and Google to the light vulnerability. The companies all said they were studying the conclusions in the paper released Monday.

Dave Limp, senior vice president of Amazon devices and services. Photo / Grant Hindsley, The New York Times
Dave Limp, senior vice president of Amazon devices and services. Photo / Grant Hindsley, The New York Times

The researchers said most microphones would need to be redesigned to remedy the problem. And simply covering the microphone with a piece of tape wouldn't solve it. Fu said the microphones on several digital assistants had dirt shields that didn't block their commands.

Security researchers have a long history of revealing stunning vulnerabilities in internet-connected devices. Experts have often cautioned that while those weaknesses can be surprising, they are often worst-case scenarios that can be exploited only in the rarest circumstances. And there is no clear indication that the light vulnerability detailed Monday has been used by hackers.

This is not the first discovery of a surprising vulnerability in digital assistants. Researchers in China and the United States have demonstrated that they can send hidden commands that are undetectable to the human ear.

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With a tsunami of internet-connected devices coming onto the market, however, the researchers said the discovery was a reminder to consumers to remain vigilant about security.

"This is the tip of the iceberg," Fu said. "There is this wide gap between what computers are supposed to do and what they actually do. With the internet of things, they can do unadvertised behaviours, and this is just one example."

An Amazon spokeswoman said that the company had not heard of anyone other than the researchers using the light-command hack and that its digital assistant customers could rely on a few easy safety measures. For one, they can set up voice PINs for Alexa shopping or other sensitive smart-home requests. They can also use the mute button to disconnect power to the microphones.

There is also a common-sense solution to the light vulnerability: If you have a voice assistant in your home, keep it out of the line of sight from outside, Genkin said. "And don't give it access to anything you don't want someone else to access," he added.


Written by: Nicole Perlroth

Photographs by: Grant Hindsley and Haruka Sakaguchi

© 2019 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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