POWER-SUPPLaY: Leaking Data from Air-Gapped Systems by Turning the Power-Supplies Into Speakers
Mordechai Guri

TL;DR
This paper introduces POWER-SUPPLaY, a novel method for covertly exfiltrating data from air-gapped and audio-gapped systems by exploiting power supply units to generate sound waves, bypassing the need for audio hardware.
Contribution
It demonstrates a new covert channel technique that leverages power supply switching frequencies to produce audible signals for data exfiltration without audio hardware.
Findings
Effective at distances up to five meters
Achieves data transfer rates of 50 bits/sec
Works on various systems including IoT devices
Abstract
It is known that attackers can exfiltrate data from air-gapped computers through their speakers via sonic and ultrasonic waves. To eliminate the threat of such acoustic covert channels in sensitive systems, audio hardware can be disabled and the use of loudspeakers can be strictly forbidden. Such audio-less systems are considered to be \textit{audio-gapped}, and hence immune to acoustic covert channels. In this paper, we introduce a technique that enable attackers leak data acoustically from air-gapped and audio-gapped systems. Our developed malware can exploit the computer power supply unit (PSU) to play sounds and use it as an out-of-band, secondary speaker with limited capabilities. The malicious code manipulates the internal \textit{switching frequency} of the power supply and hence controls the sound waveforms generated from its capacitors and transformers. Our technique enables…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Malware Detection Techniques · Internet Traffic Analysis and Secure E-voting · Cryptographic Implementations and Security
