it’s a lot more like this tbh
it’s a lot more like this tbh
the next question is how quickly can we start selling moron mabe patches? cuz that’s a great idea.
A smidgen, if you will.
coopercage was the first thing that came to mind
the linuxgaming communities are also generally p decent
it actually wasn’t in this gnome install from last night, i just happened to run across the setting while looking for something else and made the meme. but i do seem to recall having to fix this before in years past.
youtube hit me with an ad for a company that makes those little outlet boxes that go in walls. so of course my ass watched the full video, liked it, left a comment, shared the url, the whole nine yards.
https://www.theverge.com/2022/8/24/23319847/nintendo-switch-denuvo-drm-anti-cheat-software-emulated-games-pc this news isn’t even new. i figured they’d have at least applied it to a game by now.
i use my steamdeck charger for the phone and tablet yeah
idk how to tell you this but that github’s been a thing for the last five years. we’ve had these capabilities in the public sector for at least that long. this article is just about using ai to do it differently.
https://github.com/ggerganov/kbd-audio idk but feel free to go play with some tools that do the thing and see what happens.
got hit with a paywall, got around it, leaving this for the lazy
You may have gotten used to covering your webcam, but now you might have to start muffling the sound of your keyboard too.
Laptop users are at risk of having sensitive information including private messages, passwords, and credit card numbers stolen just by typing on their keyboard. A new paper by a team of researchers from British universities shows that artificial intelligence can identify keystrokes by sound alone with 95% accuracy. And as technology continues to develop at a rapid pace, attacks such as these will become more sophisticated.
In this study, experimenters correctly identified keystrokes on a MacBook Pro through a nearby phone recording 95% of the time, and through a recorded Zoom call at a 93% rate.
The research paper details what it calls “acoustic side channel attacks” in which a malicious third party uses a secondary device, like a cell phone sitting next to a laptop or an unmuted microphone on a video-conferencing software such as Zoom, to record the sound of typing. The third party then feeds the recording through a deep-learning A.I. trained to recognize the sound of individual pressed keys to decipher what exactly was typed.
Deep learning (DL) is a subset of machine learning in which computers are taught to process data in a way similar to the human brain—essentially using a multilayered “neural network” to “learn” from large amounts of data and accurately produce insights and predictions. Deep-learning models can recognize patterns in pictures, texts, sounds, and other data. This type of A.I. is in everyday products like digital assistants like Amazon’s Alexa and voice-enabled TV remotes, as well as newer technologies like self-driving cars.
“With the recent developments in both the performance of (and access to) both microphones and DL models, the feasibility of an acoustic attack on keyboards begins to look likely,” the paper said.
The paper, published on August 3, was authored by Joshua Harrison, a software development engineer at Amazon who recently graduated with a Masters of Engineering from Durham University, as well as University of Surrey lecturer Ehsan Toreini and Royal Holloway University of London senior lecturer Maryam Mehrenzhad.
Mitigating the ever-developing threat
Laptops are especially ideal targets for these attacks because of their portability, according to the paper. People often take their laptops to work in public spaces like libraries, coffee shops, and study areas, where the sound of typing can easily be recorded without notice from the targeted user.
One of the main concerns of the paper is that people are unaware of these kinds of attacks, so they do nothing to prevent them.
“The ubiquity of keyboard acoustic emanations makes them not only a readily available attack vector, but also prompts victims to underestimate (and therefore not try to hide) their output,” the paper said. “For example, when typing a password, people will regularly hide their screen but will do little to obfuscate their keyboard’s sound.”
One way to mitigate the threat of this attack is by using stronger passwords with multiple cases, like special characters, upper and lowercase letters, and numbers. Passwords with full words might be more easily deduced and therefore at greater risk of attack.
And while the pressing of the shift key can be recognized by A.I., it cannot yet recognize the “release peak” of the shift key amidst the sound of other keys, “doubling the search space of potential characters following a press of the shift key,” the paper said.
Another simple way to deter these kinds of attacks is by using two-factor authentication. This is a security method that requires two forms of identification to access accounts and data. For instance, the first factor may be a password and the second may be an account activity confirmation through an email or on a separate device.
Biometric authentication, like fingerprint scans and facial recognition, can also lessen the risk of an attack.
But as A.I. continues to evolve, so too will these attacks. The authors of the paper recommended that future studies analyze the use of smart speakers to record keystrokes, “as these devices remain always-on and are present in many homes.”
The authors also suggested that future research should explore the implementation of a language model used in tandem with a deep-learning A.I. Language models, like viral chatbot ChatGPT, are trained on large series of text to recognize patterns of speech.
A language model “could improve keystroke recognition when identifying defined words as well as an end-to-end real-world implementation of an ASC attack on a keyboard,” the paper said.
have you tried out the new engine? it runs so smooth now at late game (its currently available under betas on steam, but will become the main branch next month iirc.)
would you mind listing off a few of those? it’s clunkiness is a lot of why i haven’t been able to get into something that by all rights should be right up my alley.
it’s a lot of 7d2d lately, with the new updates that hit recently. not a super huge fan of some of the changes to progression, but it’s at least reignited my interest in wasting another 800 hours smackin tress and shooting zombies.
does it to an older copy of discord i use all the time.