alt.hn

5/31/2026 at 2:10:36 PM

FROST: Fingerprinting Remotely using OPFS-based SSD Timing [pdf]

https://hannesweissteiner.com/pdfs/frost.pdf

by simjnd

5/31/2026 at 7:26:29 PM

Wonding about running a background program that just performs low-level random reads and writes to the SSD, or driver-level mitigations to add random delays to disk activity, to obfuscate the contention patterns. Though I think that adding random noise to channels like this doesn't really prevent the attack, though might make it more expensive.

by SoftTalker

5/31/2026 at 5:26:15 PM

I still have trouble understanding what information can be leaked this way. Apparently it allows to check whether a particular website was visited recently, but the article is vague in this regard. Can anybody ELI55 this?

by nine_k

5/31/2026 at 6:48:52 PM

The Ars Technica submission might be better (I've not read TFA):

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48309492

They basically trained a neural network on the data they got from the SSD - and recorded data with other websites open in different tabs or even different browsers.

They could then guess/detect other open sites.

I presume, if they'd trained/recorded - they might detect other software as well.

But right now, they demonstrated (on MacOS) that if you open the exploit in a browser - they can look at SSD activity and tell you have website x, y and z open.

Might let you target users of a certain bank, child porn, regular porn, shopping sites... Mostly imagination that sets the limit.

by e12e

5/31/2026 at 5:55:18 PM

As much as I love a good backronym, especially one with nested acronyms in it, it could use something self-referentially recursive, preferably with tail-recursion. This is not the solution, but something like FROSTY (Fingerprinting Remotely using OPFS-based SSD Timing with frostY)

by freedomben

5/31/2026 at 6:37:57 PM

If browsers have enough low-level access to my storage hardware to carry out timing attacks for fingerprinting, it seems likely they also have enough to maliciously chug the hardware sufficiently to degrade capacity over time and otherwise impact system integrity. I hate the thought of some random website writing and overwriting random bytes in a tight loop in the background while I'm browsing elsewhere to find the cause of my slow disk subsystem.

To that end an option to disable storage access by type would be nice to have. All I see in firefox settings is the ability to block all storage including cookies, and the ability to block persistent storage when the site requests it. It's not clear to me how the OPFS system in TFA relates to either of these, but I'd guess that it's a separate system. There's a bunch of storage quotas in about:config, but nothing obviously related to OPFS (that I can see).

Given the choice I would be happy to allow traditional cookie storage and block everything else with any exceptions I need (none that I can think of) on a per-site basis. If this can be achieved via about:config, I'm all ears!

While looking at my storage data, I see youtube has 174(!) cookies and 57M data stored on my machine. Sigh.

by ttctciyf

5/31/2026 at 2:48:25 PM

I see they are testing this on a Mac. I am curious what the test results look like if the users home directory or even the dot directories are tmpfs. On Linux .bash_login can repopulate dot directories from a archive directory think skeleton files and the dot directories can be ephemeral mounted as tmpfs. The person can have a command to commit their ephemeral directories back to the archive if they want to "keep their changes" so to speak. Or automate it on .bash_logout.

    du --max-depth 0 -h -c .cache .config .local
    767M    .cache
    278M    .config
    2.2M    .local
    1.1G    total
It's a bit of space on this CachyOS laptop but it's doable.

by Bender

5/31/2026 at 5:38:49 PM

It's really difficult to reliably separate temporary and persistent browser storage. I tried at some point to reduce HDD noise. But given how neither Firefox or Chrome properly follow the XDG spec, it did not yield the results I wanted without a lot of handcrafted mounts.

In the end I'd guess you can also use some aspects of persistent storage to achieve similar results, even if the rest is actually tmpfs/RAM.

by Avamander

5/31/2026 at 6:20:08 PM

Indeed. Apps do always seem to keep adding new cruft to the filesystem layout. For a while my entire home directory was tmpfs on a few machines just to stop some of the tracking. I would commit my bookmarks back to persistent storage but that was it. It was a manual process and sometimes I would forget to commit but that's just my laziness. I'm sure others would automate this process.

by Bender

5/31/2026 at 4:45:12 PM

Saw "OPFS" and immediately misread it as OSPF (open-shortest-path-first)

by Dwedit

5/31/2026 at 4:19:37 PM

a bit off topic but on the topic of fingerprinting here, anyone knows how reddit fingerprinting works at a rough level?

by vivzkestrel