What is a Side Channel Attack?
upstart writes in with an IRC submission for RandomFactor:
What Is a Side Channel Attack?:
Modern cybersecurity depends on machines keeping secrets. But computers, like poker-playing humans, have tells. They flit their eyes when they've got a good hand, or raise an eyebrow when they're bluffing-or at least, the digital equivalent. And a hacker who learns to read those unintended signals can extract the secrets they contain, in what's known as a "side channel attack.".
Side channel attacks take advantage of patterns in the information exhaust that computers constantly give off: the electric emissions from a computer's monitor or hard drive, for instance, that emanate slightly differently depending on what information is crossing the screen or being read by the drive's magnetic head. Or the fact that computer components draw different amounts of power when carrying out certain processes. Or that a keyboard's click-clacking can reveal a user's password through sound alone.
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