Naomi Wu, AKA Sexy Cyborg, talked about how this vulnerability could leak chats in secure messaging apps last year. It got her a visit by the Chinese police and she can no longer post videos online.
See: https://www.hackingbutlegal.com/p/naomi-wu-and-the-silence-that-speaks-volumes
“Ok for those of you that haven’t figured it out I got my wings clipped and they weren’t gentle about it- so there’s not going to be much posting on social media anymore and only on very specific subjects. I can leave but Kaidi can’t so we’re just going to follow the new rules and that’s that. Nothing personal if I don’t like and reply like I used to. I’ll be focusing on the store and the occasional video. Thanks for understanding, it was fun while it lasted.” –@RealSexyCyborg, July 7, 2023
Are the on-device pinyin keyboards unusably bad at typing?
I know it’s complex to get the right meaning with the English alphabet, but I’m surprised at cloud-based keyboards
So does this affect English/European keyboards or just Asian keyboards?
It seems like the mechanism is exploiting an insecure connection (or rather a connection using predictable encryption where the same input results in the same packets) to the cloud for translating keystrokes into logographic characters?
Did I understand correctly? I definitely didn’t do a thorough read.
I also think it’s kind of interesting Gboard wasn’t included (?)
It’s about using a cloud-based model to better predict the next keystroke.
Think of the next-word-prediction of the likes of GBoard or SwiftKey, but for just strokes/characters. There’s a local model, but it’s limited in depth and complexity, and then a cloud based one, that can do more but as shown here has security flaws.
That’s why I keep my keyboard gagged behind a no-network order. My keyboard has no business being online.
Man it sucks that these open source keyboards don’t support Chinese
RIME can be configured on Android via fcitx.
Mine is offline, cause I fucking knew it!