Sirens' Whisper: Inaudible Near-Ultrasonic Jailbreaks of Speech-Driven LLMs

Zijian Ling, Huazhong University of Science and Technology and Tsinghua University; Pingyi Hu, Xiuyong Gao, and Xiaojing Ma, Huazhong University of Science and Technology; Man Zhou, Huazhong University of Science and Technology and Tsinghua University; Jun Feng and Songfeng Lu, Huazhong University of Science and Technology; Dongmei Zhang and Bin Benjamin Zhu, Microsoft Corporation

Speech-driven large language models (LLMs) are increasingly accessed through speech interfaces, introducing new security risks via open acoustic channels. We present Sirens' Whisper (SWhisper), the first practical framework for covert prompt-based attacks against speech-driven LLMs under realistic black-box conditions using commodity hardware. SWhisper enables robust, inaudible delivery of arbitrary target baseband audio—including long and structured prompts—on commodity devices by encoding it into near-ultrasound waveforms that demodulate faithfully after acoustic transmission and microphone nonlinearity. This is achieved through a simple yet effective approach to modeling nonlinear channel characteristics across devices and environments, combined with lightweight channel‑inversion pre‑compensation. Building on this high‑fidelity covert channel, we design a voice‑aware jailbreak generation method that ensures intelligibility, brevity, and transferability under speech-driven interfaces. Experiments across both commercial and open-source speech-driven LLMs demonstrate strong black-box effectiveness. On commercial models, SWhisper achieves up to 0.94 non-refusal (NR) and 0.925 specific-convincing (SC). A controlled user study further shows that the injected jailbreak audio is perceptually indistinguishable from background-only playback for human listeners. Although jailbreaks serve as a case study, the underlying covert acoustic channel enables a broader class of high-fidelity prompt-injection and command-execution attacks.

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