Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

This new AI attack steals models without touching the system

A side-channel attack can reconstruct AI models from a distance using leaked signals.

Add as a preferred source on Google
ai-scam
Sora Shimazaki / Pexels

AI systems have long been treated like sealed black boxes, especially in areas like facial recognition and autonomous driving. New research suggests that protection isn’t as solid as assumed.

A KAIST-led team shows that AI systems can be reverse engineered remotely using emissions that leak during normal operation, without direct intrusion. Instead, the approach listens.

Recommended Videos

Using a small antenna, the researchers captured faint electromagnetic traces from GPUs and rebuilt how the system was designed. It sounds like a heist trick, but the results hold up, and the security implications are immediate.

How the side channel works

The system, called ModelSpy, collects electromagnetic output produced while GPUs handle AI workloads These traces are subtle, yet they follow patterns tied to how the architecture is arranged.

By analyzing those patterns, the team inferred key details, including layer setups and parameter choices. Tests showed core structures could be identified with up to 97.6 percent accuracy.

The setup is what makes this unsettling. The antenna fits inside a bag and doesn’t need physical access. It worked from as far as six meters away, even through walls, across multiple GPU types. Computation itself becomes a side channel, exposing the system’s design without a traditional breach.

Why this changes AI security

This pushes AI security into less familiar territory. Most defenses focus on software exploits or network access. ModelSpy targets the physical byproducts of computation instead.

Even isolated systems could leak sensitive information if hardware emissions aren’t controlled. For companies, that architecture is often core intellectual property, which turns this into a direct business risk.

The work frames this as a cyber physical challenge, where defending AI now involves both digital safeguards and the surrounding environment, which raises the bar for what protection actually means.

What defenses look like now

The team also outlined ways to reduce the risk, including adding electromagnetic noise and adjusting how computations run so patterns become harder to interpret

Those fixes suggest a broader change. Securing AI may require hardware level adjustments, not just software updates, which complicates deployment for industries already locked into existing systems.

The research earned recognition at a major security conference, signaling how seriously this threat is being taken. The next exposure may not involve breaking in at all, but simply observing what systems unintentionally reveal.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
Gemini will now take notes for you in Google Meet for you, if you the minimum $20 AI tax
Yet another Google subscription just dropped for Gemini
Google Meet Take Notes for me Gemini

Google has just released a useful Gemini feature, which you can try if you are a paying member of course. The company is now bringing "Take notes for me" for Gemini, which will be available in Google Meet for Google AI Pro and Google AI Ultra subscribers, along with eligible Workspace business customers.

For personal users, the feature starts with Google AI Pro, which costs $19.99 per month in the US. In other words, Gemini can now take your Google Meet notes, provided you pay the minimum AI tax.

Read more
After iPad Pro and MacBook Pro, the iMac could be the next in line for an OLED screen upgrade
iMac with M4

The iPhone got an OLED panel in 2017, while the iPad Pro followed in 2024. Even the MacBook Pro is expected to follow later this year or early next year. But what about the iMac?

According to TrendForce, the iMac could get an OLED upgrade. There's no timeline yet, but the direction is clear. Apple wants to replace its current display technologies with OLED, raising the bar for color quality for both regular users and professionals.

Read more
This $1,299 gaming PC wants to be a Steam Machine without waiting for Valve
Valve’s Steam Machine dream is already real in MetaPC's new prebuilt
MetaPC's Steamroller is a new Steam Machine rival

Valve’s Steam Machine may be the face of SteamOS, but the platform isn't exclusive to it. A big announcement after Steam Machine's unveiling was that SteamOS would be arriving on systems outside of the new hybrid console. Now, MetaPCs is one of the first to take advantage of this by opening the preorders for the Steamroller, a new prebuilt gaming desktop that ships with SteamOS installed by default.

Though Steamroller is not trying to be a tiny console-like cube. It is a normal desktop PC with standard parts and a real upgrade path. The system costs $1,299 and is listed with a preorder date of July 3, 2026.

Read more