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Charging your phone at public stations is not a good idea, here's why

Experts have long known the risks of charging a smartphone using a USB cord that can also transfer data.

Plugging your smartphone to public charging stations or computers using USB cables can make your device vulnerable to hackers, warn scientists including one of Indian origin.

Experts have long known the risks of charging a smartphone using a USB cord that can also transfer data.

The new research at New York Institute of Technology (NYIT) shows that even without data wires, hackers using a "side channel" can quickly find out what websites a user has visited while charging a device.

Researchers, including NYIT Kiran Balagani, warn that "a malicious charging station" can use seemingly unrelated data - such as a device's power consumption - to extract sensitive information.

As a walk through any airport will show, most people are happy to plug their phones into public charging stations, putting their phones at risk of "juice-jacking," when a compromised outlet steals data through a USB data cable, researchers said.

The study is the first to show that even without a data cable, hackers can analyse a device's power needs to get at users' private information, with speed and accuracy depending on a number of factors.

The side-channel attacks were successful as "webpages have a signature that reflects the way they load and consume energy," said Paolo Gasti, assistant professor at NYIT.

The remaining power traces act as "signatures" and help hackers discover which sites have been visited.

The researchers conducted the study using power use signatures they had previously identified and tested the attack under various conditions.

After collecting power traces via a range of smartphones browsing popular websites, researchers launched attacks and checked the accuracy with which their algorithms could determine which websites were visited while the phones were plugged in. Various factors such as battery charging level, browser cache enabled/disabled, taps on the screen, and Wi-Fi/LTE influenced the accuracy rate in tracing websites visited. Some conditions, such as a fully charged battery, facilitate a fast and accurate penetration, while others, such as tapping the screen while a page is loading, lessen hackers' ability to determine what website is being viewed.

The important finding from the study is that such an attack can be carried out successfully, researchers said. In the study, the slower, less accurate attempts at penetration were still accurate within six seconds about half the time.

"Although this was an early study of power use signatures, it's very likely that information besides browsing activity can also be stolen via this side channel," said Gasti.

"Since public USB charging stations are so widely used, people need to be aware that there might be security issues with them. For example, informed users might choose not to browse the web while charging," he said.

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