Skip to main content

Your smartphone or laptop battery could be used to track you, researchers say

battery status api tracks phone laptop samsung from galaxy note 4
Digital Trends / Robert Nazarian
European researchers published a paper revealing that your privacy could be compromised from the battery in your smartphone or laptop. Most people are probably unaware of something called the battery status API. The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) introduced it in 2012, and the Firefox, Opera, and Chrome browsers support it.

Battery status API explained

It is a HTML5 specification that’s supposed to help websites conserve energy for those users that have minimal battery life remaining. Basically, the website can read the battery state of any device, such as how much life remains in terms of both minutes and percentage. Based on these results, the website can automatically disable power hungry features on webpages to conserve energy.

How is your privacy compromised?

So far so good right? Unfortunately the main problem with the API is that websites can gather this information without permission from visitors. The researchers concluded that websites can piece together the information from multiple visits through a third-party script, thus creating a fingerprint for each user. This could theoretically happen across different sites and even affect users who constantly delete cookies or are behind a VPN or corporate firewall.

battery tech
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The potential issue was raised back in 2012 and referred to in the W3C specification of the API. The “Security and privacy considerations” section has the following statement: “The information disclosed has minimal impact on privacy or fingerprinting, and therefore is exposed without permission grants.”

Are you at risk?

The study seems to be stirring up some technopanic in the tech world, but the potential danger appears to be very limited. The study was only conducted with the Firefox browser in Linux using the UPower tool. The researchers concluded the information gathered from Firefox in Windows, Mac OS X, and Android was too significant to create a fingerprint.

Furthermore, the researchers filed a bug report for the exploit with Firefox in Linux, and it was fixed in June 2015. The study never demonstrates a similar exploit in either the Chrome or Opera browsers, or even a mobile device.

The report demonstrates an issue that was already fixed, but its intent is to “draw attention to this privacy issue by demonstrating the ways to abuse the API for fingerprinting and tracking.” In other words … create buzz among tech sites, which leads to more technopanic.

No exploit should be taken lightly, but further evidence needs to be demonstrated before we start panicking on this one. And even if this evidence does surface, the API can be updated to include user permissions or whatever is necessary to thwart any potential privacy issues.

Editors' Recommendations

Robert Nazarian
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Robert Nazarian became a technology enthusiast when his parents bought him a Radio Shack TRS-80 Color. Now his biggest…
Should you leave your smartphone plugged into the charger overnight?
expert advice on how to avoid destroying your phones battery charging galaxy s10

It's an issue that has plagued humanity since the dawn of the mobile phone. We rely on our phones so much that they rarely get through a day with any power left. Many of us plug them in at night and fall asleep, content in the knowledge that we'll wake up to a fully charged device.

But is it really safe to leave our phones plugged into the charger once they're fully charged? Is it damaging the battery -- or shortening its lifespan? How can we ensure that our smartphone batteries last as long as possible? There are lots of myths and questionable ideas on this topic. You'll find the internet awash with opinions masquerading as facts. What's the truth? We've spoken to some experts and got some answers for you.
How does a smartphone battery work?
Smartphones rely on lithium-ion batteries. Battery cells have two electrodes, one electrode is graphite and the other is lithium cobalt oxide, and there's a liquid electrolyte in between which allows the lithium ions to move between the electrodes. When you charge they go from positive (lithium cobalt oxide) to negative (graphite), and when you discharge they move in the opposite direction.

Read more
Smartphone battery capacity could be increased using nanochain material
nanochain battery capacity coin cell 1

A new method could allow better materials to make up battery electrodes by converting them into a nanochain structure, the black material on this copper electrode of a coin cell. Purdue University image/Kayla Wiles

If you're frustrated by the fact that electronic gadgets continue to get more sophisticated but your smartphone battery still can't seem to last a full day, then new research from Purdue University could offer some relief. Chemists there have developed a new method for designing lithium-ion batteries which could make them last longer and charge faster.

Read more
AT&T just made it a lot easier to upgrade your phone
AT&T Storefront with logo.

Do you want to upgrade your phone more than once a year? What about three times a year? Are you on AT&T? If you answered yes to those questions, then AT&T’s new “Next Up Anytime” early upgrade program is made for you. With this add-on, you’ll be able to upgrade your phone three times a year for just $10 extra every month. It will be available starting July 16.

Currently, AT&T has its “Next Up” add-on, which has been available for the past several years. This program costs $6 extra per month and lets you upgrade by trading in your existing phone after at least half of it is paid off. But the new Next Up Anytime option gives you some more flexibility.

Read more