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posted by cmn32480 on Friday August 21 2015, @10:18PM   Printer-friendly
from the the-making-of-spy-tools dept.

From Wired:

Researchers at the University of North Carolina have developed an experimental system of so-called "visual cryptography" designed to communicate secret messages to the wearer of an augmented reality headset. In the system they created and tested, information is encrypted in what look like random collections of black and white static. But when the recipient's augmented reality glasses overlay another random-seeming image over their vision, the two images combine to form a readable message.

That system could, for instance, allow someone to unscramble encrypted text in a way that couldn't be spied on by an over-the-shoulder snoop, since the text is never decrypted on the reader's screen. Or it could be used to overlay a keypad with randomized numbers onto an ATM's display, so that no one watching could learn the bank customer's PIN as they typed it. "When you overlay the secret visual share, only you can see the final message," says UNC researcher Sarah Andrabi, using the technical term "visual share" to refer to each of the two indecipherable images that add up to a message. "That secret is now only for the user's eye."

The original paper can be found on scribd.com.

Reminds you a bit of the glasses from They Live, don't they?


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 2) by davester666 on Saturday August 22 2015, @08:46AM

    by davester666 (155) on Saturday August 22 2015, @08:46AM (#226199)

    I know, just make one of the USB ports publicly accessible.

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