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wise2006

Don’t Sweat Your Privacy: Using Humidity to Detect Human Presence
Mark Luk

Citation
Mark Luk. "Don’t Sweat Your Privacy: Using Humidity to Detect Human Presence". Talk or presentation, 10, October, 2007.

Abstract
Sensor nodes are increasingly deployed in many environments. Most of these nodes feature onboard sensor chips to measure environmental data such as humidity, temperature and light. In this paper, we show that seemingly innocuous and non-sensitive data such as humidity measurements can disclose private information such as human presence. We conduct several experiments using Telos motes running TinyOS to justify our claims and discuss research to investigate mechanisms to prevent the leakage of private information.

Electronic downloads


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Citation formats  
  • HTML
    Mark Luk. <a
    href="http://www.truststc.org/pubs/297.html"
    ><i>Don’t Sweat Your Privacy: Using
    Humidity to Detect Human Presence</i></a>, Talk
    or presentation,  10, October, 2007.
  • Plain text
    Mark Luk. "Don’t Sweat Your Privacy: Using
    Humidity to Detect Human Presence". Talk or
    presentation,  10, October, 2007.
  • BibTeX
    @presentation{Luk07_DontSweatYourPrivacyUsingHumidityToDetectHumanPresence,
        author = {Mark Luk},
        title = {Don’t Sweat Your Privacy: Using Humidity to
                  Detect Human Presence},
        day = {10},
        month = {October},
        year = {2007},
        abstract = {Sensor nodes are increasingly deployed in many
                  environments. Most of these nodes feature onboard
                  sensor chips to measure environmental data such as
                  humidity, temperature and light. In this paper, we
                  show that seemingly innocuous and non-sensitive
                  data such as humidity measurements can disclose
                  private information such as human presence. We
                  conduct several experiments using Telos motes
                  running TinyOS to justify our claims and discuss
                  research to investigate mechanisms to prevent the
                  leakage of private information.},
        URL = {http://www.truststc.org/pubs/297.html}
    }
    

Posted by Larry Rohrbough on 16 Oct 2007.
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