CRSep 14, 2017

Towards Baselines for Shoulder Surfing on Mobile Authentication

arXiv:1709.04959v268 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This work establishes baselines for shoulder surfing risks on current mobile unlock methods, helping users and researchers improve security, but it is incremental as it builds on existing knowledge without introducing new prevention methods.

The paper tackles the problem of shoulder surfing vulnerability in mobile authentication systems by conducting a large online experiment with 1173 participants, finding that 6-digit PINs have a 10.8% success rate for single observations compared to 64.2% for Android patterns, and that removing feedback lines improves pattern security.

Given the nature of mobile devices and unlock procedures, unlock authentication is a prime target for credential leaking via shoulder surfing, a form of an observation attack. While the research community has investigated solutions to minimize or prevent the threat of shoulder surfing, our understanding of how the attack performs on current systems is less well studied. In this paper, we describe a large online experiment (n=1173) that works towards establishing a baseline of shoulder surfing vulnerability for current unlock authentication systems. Using controlled video recordings of a victim entering in a set of 4- and 6-length PINs and Android unlock patterns on different phones from different angles, we asked participants to act as attackers, trying to determine the authentication input based on the observation. We find that 6-digit PINs are the most elusive attacking surface where a single observation leads to just 10.8% successful attacks, improving to 26.5\% with multiple observations. As a comparison, 6-length Android patterns, with one observation, suffered 64.2% attack rate and 79.9% with multiple observations. Removing feedback lines for patterns improves security from 35.3\% and 52.1\% for single and multiple observations, respectively. This evidence, as well as other results related to hand position, phone size, and observation angle, suggests the best and worst case scenarios related to shoulder surfing vulnerability which can both help inform users to improve their security choices, as well as establish baselines for researchers.

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