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Re: [Full-Disclosure] Does the following...



On 10 Sep 2004, at 17:18, Valdis.Kletnieks@xxxxxx wrote:
On Fri, 10 Sep 2004 14:20:14 PDT, Andrew Farmer said:
Didn't get the OP's message, but yes. If there's no microphone
attached, then the sound card (and, by extension, speech recognition)
can start picking up radio announcers. Spooky, eh?

Man, are they *still* selling sound cards that are *that* crappy and unshielded? (And I thought the built-in microphone on my Dell laptop blew chunks just because it has a tendency to pick up the hum of the disk drive motor when the gain is cranked up.... ;)

Apparently, yes. This is a known occurrence.


Support:
- Text includes some text that one might expect in radio
  - "San Bernardino 90" (traffic report)
- Speech-to-text errors
  - "nineteen 89" (1989 - nobody would ever type this)
  - "A BA, maybe" ("maybe -- maybe")
  - "9¢" ("nonsense")

To other posters:
- RF keyboards don't exist. Nobody's *that* unconcerned about security.
- Bluetooth keyboards require a pairing process to work, so that's not
too likely.
- Bayesian-defeating text? Explain to me why that'd be showing up in
Word.
- Random prose script? Falls to Occam's razor: why would it be implemented
in Word (other than as a prank)?

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