English

PowerHammer: Exfiltrating Data from Air-Gapped Computers through Power Lines

Cryptography and Security 2018-04-12 v1

Abstract

In this paper we provide an implementation, evaluation, and analysis of PowerHammer, a malware (bridgeware [1]) that uses power lines to exfiltrate data from air-gapped computers. In this case, a malicious code running on a compromised computer can control the power consumption of the system by intentionally regulating the CPU utilization. Data is modulated, encoded, and transmitted on top of the current flow fluctuations, and then it is conducted and propagated through the power lines. This phenomena is known as a 'conducted emission'. We present two versions of the attack. Line level powerhammering: In this attack, the attacker taps the in-home power lines1 that are directly attached to the electrical outlet. Phase level power-hammering: In this attack, the attacker taps the power lines at the phase level, in the main electrical service panel. In both versions of the attack, the attacker measures the emission conducted and then decodes the exfiltrated data. We describe the adversarial attack model and present modulations and encoding schemes along with a transmission protocol. We evaluate the covert channel in different scenarios and discuss signal-to-noise (SNR), signal processing, and forms of interference. We also present a set of defensive countermeasures. Our results show that binary data can be covertly exfiltrated from air-gapped computers through the power lines at bit rates of 1000 bit/sec for the line level power-hammering attack and 10 bit/sec for the phase level power-hammering attack.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1804.04014,
  title  = {PowerHammer: Exfiltrating Data from Air-Gapped Computers through Power Lines},
  author = {Mordechai Guri and Boris Zadov and Dima Bykhovsky and Yuval Elovici},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1804.04014},
  year   = {2018}
}

Comments

arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1802.02700

R2 v1 2026-06-23T01:20:33.419Z