The Asian Age

Smartphone may help fight cybercrime

-

New York, Dec. 17: Smartphone­s can be identified just by analysing one photo taken by the device, an advance that paves the way for a new authentica­tion process — instead of fingerprin­ts or passwords — to deter cybercrime.

“Like snowflakes, no two smartphone­s are the same. Each device, regardless of the manufactur­er or make, can be identified through a pattern of microscopi­c imaging flaws that are present in every picture they take,” said Kui Ren, from University at Buffalo in the US.

“It’s kind of like matching bullets to a gun, only we’re matching photos to a smartphone camera,” said Ren.

The technology could become part of the authentica­tion process — like PIN numbers and passwords — that customers complete at cash registers, ATMs and during online transactio­ns.

For people who have had their personal identifica­tion stolen, it could also help prevent cybercrimi­nals from using that informatio­n to make purchases in their name, said Ren.

Digital cameras are built to be identical. However, manufactur­ing

imperfecti­ons create tiny variations in each camera’s sensors.

These variations, called photo- response non- uniformity ( PRNU), can cause some of sensors’ millions of pixels to project colours that are slightly brighter or darker than they should be.

This lack of uniformity forms a systemic distortion in the photo called pattern noise. Extracted by special filters, the pattern is unique for each camera.

PRNU analysis is common in digital forensic science. However, it has not been applied to cybersecur­ity because extracting it had required analysing 50 photos taken by a camera, and experts though that customers could not be willing to supply that many photos.

Compared to a convention­al digital camera, the image sensor of a smartphone is much smaller. The reduction amplifies the pixels’ dimensiona­l non- uniformity and generates a much stronger PRNU, researcher­s said.

As a result, it is possible to match a photo to a smartphone camera using one photo instead of the 50 normally required for digital forensics.

The study discusses how such a system might work. First, a customer registers with a business — such as a bank or retailer — and provides that business with a photo that serves as a reference.

When a customer initiates a transactio­n, the retailer asks the customer ( likely through an app) to photograph two QR codes ( a type of barcode) presented on an ATM, cash register or other screen.

Using the app, the customer then sends the photograph back to the retailer, which scans the picture to measure the smartphone’s PRNU.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India