If you ask most security advisers about how to secure your electronic devices, somewhere in the advice you'll hear: use an up to date virus checker, keep your operating system up to date, and so on. Sadly many attacks do not rely upon hitting the security head on but rather they look for information leaking in other ways: so called side channel attacks.
If you can physically access a device you can sometime use the likes of power usage to look at patterns that reveal much of what apparently hidden but the security features of the device. We have known for many years how computer memory can be gleaned even when using the strongest encryption such as the Advanced Encryption Standard (AES).
This was recently exemplified when it was discovered that some virtual machines could extract data via leakage from other virtual machines that share the same physical platform.
With the increasing use of Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) one concern has been that such chips could be subjected to these side channel attacks. as they are used to store increasing amounts of sensitive (particular personal) data such leakage is an obvious place for hackers to target. And of course, the rise of contactless payment systems has brought a whole new impetus to this form of attack.