In a famous scene from the 1992 movie Sneakers, a hacker classic, the main characters park a surveillance van across the street from their target’s office and point a telephoto lens through his window—only to find that their view of his computer keyboard is blocked by the surprise entrance of his love interest at the precise moment when he types his password. The surveillance team ends up watching and rewatching their partially obstructed VHS video of his keystrokes, bickering comically about the layout of a QWERTY keyboard.
Today, with a few decades of surveillance tech advancements and some clever feats of physics, all it would take to grab that password—as well as anything typed on the computer, or, for that matter, every word spoken in the room—would be a well-aimed infrared laser.