Visible to the public Biblio

Filters: Author is Chen, Xiaojiang  [Clear All Filters]
2019-04-01
Ye, Guixin, Tang, Zhanyong, Fang, Dingyi, Zhu, Zhanxing, Feng, Yansong, Xu, Pengfei, Chen, Xiaojiang, Wang, Zheng.  2018.  Yet Another Text Captcha Solver: A Generative Adversarial Network Based Approach. Proceedings of the 2018 ACM SIGSAC Conference on Computer and Communications Security. :332–348.
Despite several attacks have been proposed, text-based CAPTCHAs are still being widely used as a security mechanism. One of the reasons for the pervasive use of text captchas is that many of the prior attacks are scheme-specific and require a labor-intensive and time-consuming process to construct. This means that a change in the captcha security features like a noisier background can simply invalid an earlier attack. This paper presents a generic, yet effective text captcha solver based on the generative adversarial network. Unlike prior machine-learning-based approaches that need a large volume of manually-labeled real captchas to learn an effective solver, our approach requires significantly fewer real captchas but yields much better performance. This is achieved by first learning a captcha synthesizer to automatically generate synthetic captchas to learn a base solver, and then fine-tuning the base solver on a small set of real captchas using transfer learning. We evaluate our approach by applying it to 33 captcha schemes, including 11 schemes that are currently being used by 32 of the top-50 popular websites including Microsoft, Wikipedia, eBay and Google. Our approach is the most capable attack on text captchas seen to date. It outperforms four state-of-the-art text-captcha solvers by not only delivering a significant higher accuracy on all testing schemes, but also successfully attacking schemes where others have zero chance. We show that our approach is highly efficient as it can solve a captcha within 0.05 second using a desktop GPU. We demonstrate that our attack is generally applicable because it can bypass the advanced security features employed by most modern text captcha schemes. We hope the results of our work can encourage the community to revisit the design and practical use of text captchas.
2017-03-07
Wang, Ju, Zhang, Lichao, Wang, Xuan, Xiong, Jie, Chen, Xiaojiang, Fang, Dingyi.  2016.  A Novel CSI Pre-processing Scheme for Device-free Localization Indoors. Proceedings of the Eighth Wireless of the Students, by the Students, and for the Students Workshop. :6–8.

Device-free localization of people and objects indoors not equipped with radios is playing a critical role in many emerging applications. This paper presents a novel channel state information (CSI) pre-processing scheme that enables accurate device-free localization indoors. The basic idea is simple: CSI is sensitive to a target's location and by modelling the CSI measurements of multiple wireless links as a set of power fading based equations, the target location can be determined. However, due to rich multipaths in indoor environment, the received signal strength (RSS) or even the fine-grained CSI can not be easily modelled. We observe that even in a rich multipath environment, not all subcarriers are equally affected by multipath reflections. Our preprocessing scheme tries to identify the subcarriers not affected by multipath. Thus, CSIs on the "clean" subcarriers can be modelled and utilized for accurate localization. Extensive experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed pre-processing scheme.

Wang, Ju, Jiang, Hongbo, Xiong, Jie, Jamieson, Kyle, Chen, Xiaojiang, Fang, Dingyi, Xie, Binbin.  2016.  LiFS: Low Human-effort, Device-free Localization with Fine-grained Subcarrier Information. Proceedings of the 22Nd Annual International Conference on Mobile Computing and Networking. :243–256.

Device-free localization of people and objects indoors not equipped with radios is playing a critical role in many emerging applications. This paper presents an accurate model-based device-free localization system LiFS, implemented on cheap commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) Wi-Fi devices. Unlike previous COTS device-based work, LiFS is able to localize a target accurately without offline training. The basic idea is simple: channel state information (CSI) is sensitive to a target's location and by modelling the CSI measurements of multiple wireless links as a set of power fading based equations, the target location can be determined. However, due to rich multipath propagation indoors, the received signal strength (RSS) or even the fine-grained CSI can not be easily modelled. We observe that even in a rich multipath environment, not all subcarriers are affected equally by multipath reflections. Our pre-processing scheme tries to identify the subcarriers not affected by multipath. Thus, CSIs on the "clean" subcarriers can be utilized for accurate localization. We design, implement and evaluate LiFS with extensive experiments in three different environments. Without knowing the majority transceivers' locations, LiFS achieves a median accuracy of 0.5 m and 1.1 m in line-of-sight (LoS) and non-line-of-sight (NLoS) scenarios respectively, outperforming the state-of-the-art systems. Besides single target localization, LiFS is able to differentiate two sparsely-located targets and localize each of them at a high accuracy.