But you'd have no idea where to start or end the tracing. This, in effect, gives unlimited possible combinations based on differing starting and ending points of the same pattern. Shannon Francis IT Security Compliance Analyst JetBlue Airways 8265 Hanger Blvd Orlando, FL 32827 Tel: 407.375.0405 -----Original Message----- From: Dan Dascalescu [mailto:ddascalescu@xxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, January 14, 2010 8:17 PM To: bugtraq@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: Major security risk in the unlock pattern for Android devices If you use locking, just look carefully at your Android phone screen and you'll most likely already see the streak/smudge fingerprint trace. An attacker only has to trace that in both directions and is guaranteed access. By contrast, smudges left behind a PIN of N digits offer N! combinations. This is a common scenario that leaves the smudge easily visible: 1. Receive a notification of some sort (IM, SMS, e-mail etc.) 2. Unlock the phone (leaves the fingerprint trace) 3. Delete the notification (one or two taps that don't erase or scatter the smudge). 4. Lock the phone (usually pressing a hardware button, leaving the smudge intact). Issue filed at http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=3146#c4