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Security Privacy Software

Gaze-Tracking Software Protects Computer Privacy 134

Posted by kdawson
from the shoulder-surfer-wipeout dept.
Ponca City, We Love You writes "Two years ago computer security expert Bill Anderson read about scientific research on how the human eye moves as it reads and processes text and images. 'This obscure characteristic... suddenly struck me as (a solution to) a security problem,' says Anderson. With the help of a couple of software developers, Anderson developed a software program called Chameleon that tracks a viewer's gaze patterns and only allows an authorized user to read text on the screen, while everyone else sees gibberish. Chameleon uses gaze-tracking software and camera equipment to track an authorized reader's eyes to show only that one person the correct text. After a 15-second calibration period in which the software learns the viewer's gaze patterns, anyone looking over that user's shoulder sees dummy text that randomly and constantly changes. To tap the broader consumer market, Anderson built a more consumer-friendly version called PrivateEye, which can work with a simple Webcam to blur a user's monitor when he or she turns away. It also detects other faces in the background, and a small video screen pops up to alert the user that someone is looking at the screen. 'There have been inventions in the space of gaze-tracking. There have been inventions in the space of security,' says Anderson. 'But nobody has put the two ideas together, as far as we know.'"
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Gaze-Tracking Software Protects Computer Privacy

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  • Ok? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by arizwebfoot (1228544) * on Tuesday July 07 2009, @05:53PM (#28614681)

    So what happens when you are typing and listening to music, you head is swinging back and forth to the beat? Will the gaze thingy be able to follow or will you pass in and out of it's "verified" zone?

    Perhaps it would do better to map your face like they do at gambling casinos. Then if it sees anyone other than your face, it takes corrective action.

  • by Reason58 (775044) on Tuesday July 07 2009, @05:58PM (#28614757)
    If your workers are handling sensitive material maybe you shouldn't have them in a cubicle with their back to the entrance.
  • by idontgno (624372) on Tuesday July 07 2009, @06:01PM (#28614811) Journal
    TFA's description of the technology contains a bit of hand-waving:

    Chameleon uses gaze-tracking software and camera equipment to track an authorized reader's eyes

    Check, that's doable now.

    to show only that one person the correct text.

    How? Elfin magic? If a screen region under the "authorized reader's" field of view is displaying the protected content to the authorized reader, it's also displaying exactly the same thing to anyone else who happens to be looking at the same area.

    So far as I can tell, this is the part of the proof labeled "Magic happens here". Also known as the part of the technology that needs more investment. So invest now!

    Where's my flying car, dammit?

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 07 2009, @06:02PM (#28614827)

    Have you actually, say, worked with a privacy screen? The ones which have been foisted upon me suck. That and, oh, yeah, they don't work with laptops. However, an even sweeter rendition would be focus follows gaze, particularly for X11 and the random desktop environments. Then instead of wiggling the mouse every time I switch screens, I could just type where I'm looking. Obviously, it should hold the focus and let me keep typing if I'm still typing when I look away.

  • by idontgno (624372) on Tuesday July 07 2009, @06:27PM (#28615125) Journal

    Because the screen shows constantly changing random words, it would be difficult for someone approaching your screen to figure out exactly which point on the screen you were looking at.

    Not that difficult, if the shoulder-surfer could watch for more than a few seconds. Especially if part of the screen seemed to show a consistent typeface, flowing sentences, coherent subject matter... i.e., anything not obviously random. Humans are damn good at pattern recognition. Moreso, if the shoulder-surfer has some idea what he's looking for, and the "authorized reader" is unaware he's being monitored. And don't deny that can happen. Anyone capable of concentrating sufficiently to work well is going to lose some environmental awareness, and a sufficiently sneaky voyeur would be able to benefit from that.

    Overall, though, it would probably make more sense, and be cheaper, to avoid working on your private material where other people can see your screen

    Yup. This smells like a solution looking to shoulder out existing and simpler solutions.

    Paradoxically, the "consumer-grade" idea in TFA actually seems more valuable: The display is normal, but when your eyes leave it the whole thing blanks. This helps solve the very-real and not-well-solved problem of leaving terminals unattended.

  • by stokessd (89903) on Tuesday July 07 2009, @07:07PM (#28615511) Homepage

    Screw privacy, I want my window manager to focus the window I'm looking at. Now that would be useful.

    Sheldon

  • Awesome! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by kheldan (1460303) on Tuesday July 07 2009, @07:23PM (#28615671) Journal
    This sounds like an awesome development in the area of personal security alright -- especially for looking at porn in your cubicle at work. Your boss or co-worker peers over the wall to try to catch you? No problem, it blurs the screen!
  • Re:Flat screens! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by JCSoRocks (1142053) on Tuesday July 07 2009, @07:23PM (#28615673)
    It's all about the quality of the monitor. Cheap LCDs are lousy just like cheap CRTs were lousy - they just fail in different ways. Shop around and you can find a flat panel with a good viewing angle as well as decent color reproduction.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 07 2009, @10:10PM (#28616915)

    The problem will be when someone applies this to force the focused eyes to look at an advertisement (and probably also the real goal of the research, not some semi-useful shoulder-security application).

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