BBS:      TELESC.NET.BR
Assunto:  This tech turns routers into surveillance tech
De:       Mike Powell
Data:     Tue, 26 May 2026 09:47:34 -0500
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'This technology turns every router into a potential means for surveillance': 
researchers warn you can be tracked and identified from Wi-Fi signals

Date:
Mon, 25 May 2026 12:14:58 +0000

Description:
Feedback signals used by ordinary routers can be tapped into to identify you 
based on the way you walk.

FULL STORY
Researchers from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in
Germany have demonstrated how everyday Wi-Fi routers can be hacked and used 
as surveillance tools, using only the radio waves traveling from and back to 
the router. 

Here's how it works: routers using Wi-Fi 5 or later get feedback signals sent 
back to them from connected devices, known as Beamforming Feedback 
Information (BFI). The router uses this feedback to manage speeds and 
stability, but these messages are flowing freely through the air, and can be 
nabbed by other devices too. If someone physically passes through those 
signals, they get disrupted. The signal map isn't quite like a 3D map of a 
room, but the way the signals shift can act as a sort of signature for a 
person, based on how they walk and move through the space.

Using some special software and a device with a Wi-Fi card (so a laptop, or a 
Raspberry Pi device for example), someone can monitor these BFI signals and 
check for disruption. As the signals are unencrypted, there's no need for 
physical access to the router, or the Wi-Fi password  the monitoring device 
just needs to be in the same physical space.  The researchers ran
tests using 197 volunteers, and were able to identify people with 99.5% 
accuracy  as in, they could say 'person A walked past at this time and this 
time'. To actually link people with their name and other details, some other 
data would be required, such as a ping from a phone previously associated 
with the individual. 

So, a listening device could be hidden in an office, and a hacker could tell 
who was at work that day, assuming they knew which walking gaits matched 
which people. Once the initial match is made, targets wouldn't even need to 
be carrying a device (such as a phone). 

"This technology turns every router into a potential means for surveillance," 
says Julian Todt , one of the researchers. "If you regularly pass by a cafe 
that operates a Wi-Fi network, you could be identified there without noticing 
it and be recognized later  for example by public authorities or companies." 

The research team wants to see more protection for BFI data in future Wi-Fi 
standards  otherwise this is potentially a very real security threat, 
affecting most modern routers. You can read the full research paper at the
link in the story (linked below).

Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/computing/computing-security/this-technology-turns-e
very-router-into-a-potential-means-for-surveillance-researchers-warn-you-can-b
e-tracked-and-identified-from-wi-fi-signals

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