Skip to main content

Here’s why you should not type in a PIN while wearing a wearable

Apple Watch Wrist
Giuseppe Costantino/Shutterstock
Smartwatches and wearables may be great for alerting you to get on your feet and exercise, but you may not want to wear them when inputting secure PINs, like the one you punch in at the ATM.

A new paper, titled “Friend or Foe?: Your Wearable Devices Reveal Your Personal PIN,” shows that deciphering someone’s PIN isn’t that hard, though the paper doesn’t dive into the specific wearables that were used.

Written by researchers at the Stevens Institute of Technology and Binghamton University, the paper reveals that attackers can track the millimeter-level distances and directions of hand movements thanks to embedded sensors like accelerometers, gyroscopes, and magnetometers, in the wearable device. By tracking your exact movements, researchers were able to “derive the moving distance” of a person’s hand between key entries on key-based systems like a keyboard or ATM.

They successfully reverse-engineered the wearable’s sensors to track a person’s hand movements to see the PIN that was entered — that method is called the “Backward PIN-Sequence Inference algorithm.” The group tested more than 5,000 key-entry traces from 20 adults with different kinds of wearables. The technique provided an accuracy of 80 percent on one try, and that jumped to 90 percent with three tries.

Attackers can use this method in two ways — by installing malware directly onto the device, or by grabbing the data via the Bluetooth connection that bridges the wearable to the smartphone, according to Phys.org.

It all sounds awfully simple, but researchers do offer a solution to manufacturers and developers — insert some “noise data” to obscure the sensitive data. This solution sounds incredibly similar to differential privacy — a tool Apple is using in iOS 10 to make data-gathering more secure and anonymous. Google has also been using this technique in its Chrome browser for years.

We have reached out to the group to check which devices they tested with, but in the meantime, perhaps you should take off your wearable before you enter your secure PINs.

Updated on 07-07-2016 by Julian Chokkattu: Clarified that attackers use tracking data from the wearable to decipher PINs typed on physical key-based systems.

[amz_nsa_keyword keyword=”Portable VPN”]
Julian Chokkattu
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Julian is the mobile and wearables editor at Digital Trends, covering smartphones, fitness trackers, smartwatches, and more…
I wore the Whoop 4.0 fitness tracker for a month. Here’s why I’m getting rid of it
Someone wearing a black Whoop 4.0 tracker.

Over the past year, I've developed an obsession with health/fitness trackers. Previously a longtime and dedicated Apple Watch user, my wrist (and fingers) has been home to a myriad of competing wearables — including ones from Garmin, Samsung, Google, Oura, and others.

One fitness tracker that really caught my eye last year is the Whoop 4.0. It tracks your daily activity, workouts, sleep, recovery, and a mountain of other health data. On paper, it looked like exactly the type of health wearable I've been searching for.

Read more
I have the OnePlus 12. Here’s why you should be excited about it
OnePlus 12 in Flowy Emerald held in hand in sunlight.

OnePlus launched the OnePlus 12 in China on December 5, 2023. On January 23, OnePlus will launch the OnePlus 12 and the lower-priced OnePlus 12R globally, including in the U.S. And it's time to start getting excited about that.

OnePlus has established itself as one of the bigger names in the smartphone world, and 2023 was an especially promising year for the company. Last year’s OnePlus 11 was a solid choice, and the OnePlus Open —the brand’s first foldable — was one of the best folding phones I've ever tried.

Read more
Fitbit recalls Ionic smartwatch after several burn reports
best walmart deals on apple watch garmin and fitbit ionic smartwatch adidas edition ice gray silver

Fitbit Ionic smartwatch users need to stop using their devices right now. The company has recalled its Ionic wearable after over 150 reports of the watch’s lithium-ion battery overheating, and 78 reports of burn injuries to the users. It will offer a refund of $299 to the Fitbit Ionic smartwatch users who return the device.

Fitbit has received at least 115 reports in the United States and over 50 reports internationally about the Ionic smartwatch's battery overheating. It is recalling the device as there are two reports of third-degree burns and four reports of second-degree burns out of the 78 total burn injuries report.

Read more