SuperEar: Eavesdropping on Mobile Voice Calls via Stealthy Acoustic Metamaterial

Publication
The ACM Web Conference (WWW)

Abstract

Acoustic eavesdropping is a privacy risk, but existing attacks rarely work in real outdoor situations where people make phone calls on the move. We present SuperEar, the first portable system that uses acoustic metamaterials to reliably capture conversations in these scenarios. We show that the threat is real as a practical prototype can be implemented to enhance faint signals, cover the full range of speech with a compact design, and reduce noise and distortion to produce clear audio. We show that SuperEar can be implemented from low-cost 3D-printed parts and off-the-shelf hardware. Experimental results show that SuperEar can recover phone call audio with a success rate of over 80% at distances of up to 4.6 m - more than twice the range of previous approaches. Our findings highlight a new class of privacy threats enabled by metamaterial technology that requires attention.

Zhanyong Tang
Zhanyong Tang
Visiting scholar
Zheng Wang
Zheng Wang
Professor of Intelligent Software Technology