Proximity Tracing in an Ecosystem of Surveillance Capitalism
Paul-Olivier Dehaye, Joel Reardon

TL;DR
This paper critically examines proximity tracing apps used for COVID-19, revealing significant vulnerabilities that allow attackers to eavesdrop, interfere, and monitor users without their knowledge, raising privacy concerns.
Contribution
It uncovers the underestimated ease of executing attacks on proximity tracing systems and introduces a novel biosurveillance attack exploiting app permissions.
Findings
Attackers can eavesdrop and interfere at no hardware cost.
A biosurveillance attack can monitor users who believe they have opted out.
Over 100 million devices are vulnerable due to app permission issues.
Abstract
Proximity tracing apps have been proposed as an aide in dealing with the COVID-19 crisis. Some of those apps leverage attenuation of Bluetooth beacons from mobile devices to build a record of proximate encounters between a pair of device owners. The underlying protocols are known to suffer from false positive and re-identification attacks. We present evidence that the attacker's difficulty in mounting such attacks has been overestimated. Indeed, an attacker leveraging a moderately successful app or SDK with Bluetooth and location access can eavesdrop and interfere with these proximity tracing systems at no hardware cost and perform these attacks against users who do not have this app or SDK installed. We describe concrete examples of actors who would be in a good position to execute such attacks. We further present a novel attack, which we call a biosurveillance attack, which allows the…
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