Websites are using this FROST-y new technique to spy on users by snooping on their SSD activity

Websites are using this FROST-y new technique to spy on users by snooping on their SSD activity | Daily Reports Online

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  • Researchers at Graz University of Technology unveiled FROST, a browser side‑channel attack
  • The method can reveal visited websites and opened desktop apps, but requires large file creation
  • Limitations exist, yet the study highlights how modern browser features expand the attack surface for surveillance

Security researchers have come up with a new way of spying on internet users, and they’re calling it FROST. Recently, more than half a dozen researchers from the Graz University of Technology (Austria) published a new report called “FROST: Fingerprinting Remotely using OPFS-based SSD Timing” in which they claim that there is a way to spy on user activities directly through the browser.


This is a remote side-channel technique that exploits a standard browser feature called the Origin Private File System (OPFS). Generally, a side-channel attack is a way of stealing secrets by measuring physical side effects, such as how long an action takes, how much power it uses. In this case, the researchers measured solid-state drive (SSD) access speeds, allowing them to track which websites a victim visited, and what desktop applications they opened.


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