Stop Bugging Me! Evading Modern-Day Wiretapping Using Adversarial Perturbations
Mass surveillance systems for voice over IP (VoIP) conversations pose a great risk to privacy. These automated systems use learning models to analyze conversations, and calls that involve specific topics are routed to a human agent for further examination. In this study, we present an adversarial-le...
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Zusammenfassung: | Mass surveillance systems for voice over IP (VoIP) conversations pose a great
risk to privacy. These automated systems use learning models to analyze
conversations, and calls that involve specific topics are routed to a human
agent for further examination. In this study, we present an
adversarial-learning-based framework for privacy protection for VoIP
conversations. We present a novel method that finds a universal adversarial
perturbation (UAP), which, when added to the audio stream, prevents an
eavesdropper from automatically detecting the conversation's topic. As shown in
our experiments, the UAP is agnostic to the speaker or audio length, and its
volume can be changed in real time, as needed. Our real-world solution uses a
Teensy microcontroller that acts as an external microphone and adds the UAP to
the audio in real time. We examine different speakers, VoIP applications
(Skype, Zoom, Slack, and Google Meet), and audio lengths. Our results in the
real world suggest that our approach is a feasible solution for privacy
protection. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2010.12809 |