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Eavesdropping, spying trends, surveillance gadgets, privacy laws, espionage stories, TSCM, security tips, FutureWatch predictions and items from Kevin's travels, it's all here. All geared to keeping his client family at least one step ahead, and mildly amused. Copyright: 2006 - Kevin D. Murray Fri, 15 Dec 2006 19:15:09 +0100 Department of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Washington - The Nike+iPod kit consists of a sensor which is placed in the sole of your left Nike+ shoe and a receiver which plugs into the bottom of the iPod Nano. The sensor in your shoe detects when you take steps (while walking or jogging) and transmits this information to the receiver.
When you walk or run the Nike+iPod sensor in your shoe will transmit messages using a wireless radio. These messages contain a unique identifier that can be detected from 60 feet away. This information is potentially private because it can reveal where you are, even when you'd prefer for a bad person to not know your location. From Nike... Simply slip the Nike+ sensor into the Air Zoom Moire shoe pocket, or any other Nike+ Ready shoe, and head out. The Nike+ sensor slips unobtrusively into a pocket under the sockliner. Waterproof and virtually unbreakable. $29.00 Fri, 15 Dec 2006 18:12:06 +0100 "Tapping into mobile phones is a serious matter."
Mr Justice Goss in the Clive Goodman case A reporter for Britain's top selling tabloid newspaper pleaded guilty to tapping into the mobile phones of the aides of the Prince Wales and his son, Prince William. Clive Goodman, the News of the World royal editor was caught telephoning the mobiles of the royal family, waiting for the voicemail and punch in the security code. Espionage alert to Bahrain firms "Espionage occurs on a daily basis and most of us don't even know it." Mr Richard Clark at the ASIS International Conference in Middle East Industrial espionage and organised crime are the biggest threats facing companies in Bahrain and the Middle East, said a former counter-terrorism chief Richard Clark, who served as a senior White House adviser for current President George W Bush and his two predecessors. The Spies Among Us "Corporate espionage is not a legal means to compete with rivals." Wallack, Todd Companies' efforts to collect intelligence on their competitors span a wide range of activities, often as simple as calling an employee at a competing company and asking for product information, department data, and information on colleagues' duties. However, competitive intelligence providers note that corporate espionage, a technique using deception or theft to obtain information about companies and products, is not a legal means of maintaining a competitive advantage over rivals. Met tapped senior officer's calls "Met's internal tapping into their staff was unlawful." The Metropolitan Police unlawfully tapped phone calls of one of their own senior officers, Chief Superintendent Ali Dizaei, legal adviser to the National Black Police Association (NBPA). "Corporate and government security professionals met in NYC to discuss counter terrorist solutions in capital cities" "Industrial espionage is now used as one of the intelligence gathering tools for the purposes of terrorism." Dave Evans at the Global Aware International Counter Terrorism Conference Global Aware International and HSBC held a Counter Terrorism Conference in New York at the end of last month. It was stressed that industrial espionage is now used as one of the intelligence gathering tools for the purposes of terrorism. News clips courtesy of Whiterock, a trusted and reputable counter espionage and Critical Information Defence business operating from the UK since 1995. Fri, 15 Dec 2006 17:47:24 +0100 Miami - The buzz around the Dolphins' (US football) locker room Sunday was about how the defense flustered New England's Tom Brady by adjusting to his calls at the line of scrimmage.
The buzz since Miami's 21-0 win is about how the Dolphins managed to decipher those calls. Two Dolphins defenders said the team acquired game tape that included audio of Brady making calls, The Palm Beach Post reported Monday. (Nick) Saban (the coach) said the Dolphins simply used past telecasts. One former NFL general manager, who wished to remain anonymous, isn't sure the Dolphins could get that much information off a TV telecast. Fri, 15 Dec 2006 17:38:35 +0100 A Greek privacy group fined Vodafone Greece 76 million euros over a bugging scandal that involved eavesdropping on high-ranking officials including the prime minister, Greek media reports said Thursday.
The fine was imposed for for failing to protect the network from unknown hackers, and for obstructing the investigation. Why this is important to YOU! Remember this phrase... "failing to protect" Every corporation has a duty to protect their assets - even from eavesdropping. Remember this phrase... "If you don't protect, it is neglect." A call to us might just save you a few million dollars/euros. Fri, 15 Dec 2006 17:24:47 +0100 The University of Illinois College of Law, in cooperation with WCIA-TV (CBS), produces a biweekly 30-minute television program "Illinois Law," on legal issues in the news. ...
Episode 3. "Wiretapping, Terrorism, and Private Lives" (Professor Richard McAdams, Professor Jacqueline Ross, former US District Attorney, Marshall Stone, FBI Special Agent) - The history of Wiretapping, the FBI and the FISA Warrant; How to obtain a warrant and how to use it; Stories from the field; The effects of 9/11; Wiretapping and a citizen's Constitutional Rights. Fri, 15 Dec 2006 17:18:34 +0100 The federal investigation of Anthony Pellicano took a surprising turn Tuesday when one of his co-defendants pleaded guilty to using the former private eye to wiretap a Beverly Hills businessman six years ago.
In an appearance before U.S. District Judge Dale S. Fischer, Daniel Nicherie also pleaded guilty to three other felony counts of defrauding the Beverly Hills businessman and others through pension fraud, wire fraud and money laundering. Nicherie, 46, is the fifth person to plead guilty to having Pellicano wiretap his clients' courtroom adversaries or business rivals. Thu, 14 Dec 2006 18:01:37 +0100 January 2007KidSpy™ Workshop Spy Gadgetry Sunday, 7 January; 10:30 am – 12:30 pm February 2007 KidSpy™ Workshop Operation Night Spy: Espionage in the Dark Thursday, 22 February; 7–9 pm March 2007 KidSpy™ Overnight Operation Secret Slumber Saturday, 10 March – Sunday, 11 March; 7 pm – 10 am August 2007 KidSpy™ Summer Day Camp Operation Beat the Heat Monday, 6 August – Friday, 10 August; 9 am – 3 pm Wed, 13 Dec 2006 15:09:41 +0100 India - It was a sting operation with a difference. Normally, it is the media that conducts sting operations, but in this case it was a politician conducting a sting operation on his colleague.
Naturally, when Tilak Raj Kataria went public with the video footage of a sting operation on Kulwant Singh, the media was curious. Never mind the unexplained delay of more than 10 months to release the CD. The 15-minutes video footage, released on Monday evening, shows Kulwant Singh, spouse of MC president, Manveer Gill, talking to Tilak Raj Kataria. Kataria has alleged that Kulwant Singh had offered a bribe worth Rs eight lakh to Kataria, in order to get the support of Kataria's wife Anjala and that of Sharda Gupta, who represents Sector 12A. Anjala Kataria is a councillor, representing Sector 20. Kataria, a former general secretary of the local unit of the Congress, informed the media that the operation was carried out through a spycam fitted in a sofa in his house. Wed, 13 Dec 2006 15:02:24 +0100 MI - Police said a 19-year-old man is in custody for using his camera phone to capture images of a woman while she was in the bathroom, according to the Ann Arbor News.
Police said a woman was using the restroom at the clubhouse in Glencoe Hills Apartments on Friday when she said she heard the door open and saw the camera dangling over the top of the stall. Employees of the apartments chased and held down the man until police arrived. Investigators confiscated the man's phone, and are seeking a warrant to crack the password that's prohibiting them from viewing the images, according to the paper's reports. The man was released during the investigation. If charged, the man faces electronic eavesdropping, which is a felony punishable by up to five years in prison. Tue, 12 Dec 2006 16:01:46 +0100 Former intelligence agents with close ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin are increasingly taking leading roles in the government and businesses...
Elsewhere in the region, former secret-service agents hold important government posts. Romania's top environmental official, Silvian Ionescu, for example was once a senior officer at Romania's secret police force, the New York Times notes. Romania's secret services have been reorganized and many of the pre-1989 leaders replaced, but many lower-level agents remain and some now have ties to important businessmen, the Times says. Tue, 12 Dec 2006 02:20:53 +0100 If you use a computer or cell phone at work, your employer is probably spying on you -- keeping track of all your electronic communications.
It's not only legal - the government actually requires companies to do it. Nine out of 10 employers monitor their workers electronic activities, according to an E-Policy Institute survey. And while it's perfectly legal, it's not always welcome. One woman employee said, "You just kind of feel the sense that somebody is watching you all the time." "It's almost like a police-state mentality," said a male employee. Fred Lane, author of the "Naked Employee-How Technology Compromises Workplace Privacy," said, "Employers can track everything you do, from a single keystroke to hours of web surfing." But all this electronic spying is getting some in trouble. Last year, more than 30 percent of U.S. employers let a worker go after using a company computer for personal reasons. Mon, 11 Dec 2006 19:44:30 +0100 Chicago, IL — The gunman who went on a deadly shooting spree in a downtown high-rise law office went to the building in search of an attorney because he felt cheated over an invention... Jackson chained the doors behind him, grabbed a hostage and started shooting, as he ranted to witnesses that he had been deceived over his invention, a toilet for a truck...
Mon, 11 Dec 2006 17:54:12 +0100 Botswana Police Service is in the process of acquiring surveillance technology to enable the police to listen in on electronic communications.
The covert system will enable the law enforcement institution to intercept cellphone communication as well as Internet services. However, it has been revealed that many of the stakeholders have not been informed of the initiative. Sat, 09 Dec 2006 13:09:41 +0100 Computer giant Hewlett-Packard Co (HP) has agreed to pay US$14.5 million to settle civil charges linked to a boardroom espionage scandal, California state officials said on Thursday.
Fri, 08 Dec 2006 17:38:46 +0100 "Alibi Network is a cutting edge full service agency providing alibis and excused absences as well as assistance with a variety of sensitive issues. We view ourselves as professional advisors who understand our clients’ unique situations. We explore various approaches with our clients and implement the best solution based on each individual case. We understand your need for privacy and we are completely discreet and confidential.
We all encounter sensitive situations in our life. These may include family problems, social issues, work or financial difficulties. When you don’t want to involve your close friends and relatives for privacy reasons it is time to contact Alibi Network. Let us be your Privacy Partners." Actually, we are your best Privacy Partner. Just thought you should know about this in case someone you know is an Alibinetwork member. Fri, 08 Dec 2006 17:05:50 +0100 GA - A surprise revelation...at the Fulton County murder trial of Scott Davis prompted the defense to ask the judge to declare a mistrial.
It turns out that District Attorney Paul Howard has been monitoring everything going on in the courtroom, by closed circuit television in his office. The defense wondered aloud in court whether Howard has been able to monitor private conversations at the defense table. ...Scott Davis's attorneys complained that the cameras and microphones installed in the courtroom for the trial have not always been turned off during recesses, as the judge had ordered them to be. So the attorneys are worried that Howard may have been able to hear defense attorneys privately discussing their strategies. Fulton County Superior Court Judge Tom Campbell said he would think about whether to declare a mistrial, ... This is the 10th mistrial the defense has requested... DA Paul Howard issued this statement: ...the District Attorney has access to is the exact same feed the media have access to in the press room—nothing more, nothing less. (but, was anything heard that was not supposed to be heard) The pictures and sounds made available to the District Attorney are the same pictures and sounds made available to the public through the media. (but, was anything heard that was not supposed to be heard) There are NO secret cameras, microphones or recording devises of any kind. (we all know that, but, was anything heard that was not supposed to be heard) Thu, 07 Dec 2006 15:15:38 +0100 Sheriff's office completes probe at Homeland Security
The bugging of the Memphis Homeland Security office will not yield any criminal charges, officials said Wednesday. (whattasurprise) Mon, 04 Dec 2006 16:51:11 +0100 ![]() Thanko presents all new Spy Disk With Card Reader features a high quality pen and USB memory disk combined as one. THANKO Spy Disk With Card Reader also has a card reader slot for SD/MMC card. SD/MMC card and Ricin tip not included. Fri, 01 Dec 2006 19:43:04 +0100 NEW YORK - You see it all over the city, an unmarked car with emergency lights flashing trying to make it through traffic. But have you ever wondered while you're sitting in gridlock what the emergency was?
A natural thought from drivers who on any given day deal with some of the worst traffic in the country -- average commute time 90 minutes -- is "this guy must be headed to a serious emergency." Or is he? CBS 2 caught up to one such unmarked car in a heck of a hurry. (See the video clip for the Extortionography answer.) Fri, 01 Dec 2006 16:57:52 +0100 PA - The room resembled a Radio Shack more than a Delaware County courtroom.
During sometimes tedious testimony yesterday, prosecutors spent most of their time introducing many of the items as evidence found in the two offices used by former Folcroft Borough Manager Anthony Truscello at the municipal building. Truscello is accused of illegal video surveillance of the police department and faces charges of tampering with public records, invasion of privacy, criminal conspiracy, and wiretapping. Prosecutors have said Truscello, 69, of Wallingford, and his codefendant, former council vice president Joseph Zito, 52, hid cameras to discredit former Police Chief Ed Christie, who had planned to run against Truscello's daughter, Deborah, for her seat as a magisterial judge. Truscello and Zito say they were trying to verify that officers were sleeping on the job during their overnight shift. One video introduced into evidence was a pornographic movie, found in the same desk drawer in Truscello's office as a tape that showed Folcroft's only female officer, Leslie McLean, undressing in the police locker room. "Did you view that movie?" E. Marc Costanzo, a senior deputy attorney general for Pennsylvania, asked Detective Thomas H. Worrilow Jr., of the county special investigations unit. "I did, on fast-forward," Worrilow responded, eliciting a burst of laughter. Fri, 01 Dec 2006 15:07:17 +0100 (Presswire) Security specialist Scanit says web phone installations in corporate environments have little or no protection against VoIP wiretapping...
“Throughout the Middle East, the installations we have seen have not had strong security controls in place,” Scanit engineer Sheran Gunasekera explains. “Primarily, the reason for this has been the fact that the system integrator or implementer had not paid much attention to the security of the entire setup.” It is possible, Scanit (www.scanit.net) says, for an internal employee of the organisation, to intercept voice conversations and re-route calls outside of the firm’s network. Fri, 01 Dec 2006 14:53:47 +0100 UK - Revelations of a sustained bugging campaign targeting two government ministers, a newspaper editor, an England footballer and a string of celebrities prompted calls yesterday for tougher sentences for the buying and selling of confidential personal data.
The government's information commissioner spoke out after Clive Goodman, the News of the World's royal editor, admitted at the Old Bailey yesterday to tapping into mobile phones belonging to aides of the Prince of Wales and his son, Prince William, over a 20 month period. Goodman, 48, faces up to two years in jail for conspiracy to intercept communications contrary to the Criminal Law Act 1977. Mr Justice Goss agreed to remand him on unconditional bail for pre-sentence reports but he warned: "I am not ruling out any options. It's a very serious matter." Glenn Mulcaire, a former footballer turned private detective who was hired by Goodman, admitted the same charge. He also pleaded guilty to five charges of unlawfully intercepting voicemail messages left by Max Clifford, the publicist, Skylet Andrew, who is agent for the footballer Sol Campbell, Gordon Taylor, chairman of the Professional Footballers' Association, the MP Simon Hughes and the model Elle Macpherson. Fourteen other charges were allowed to lie on file. But the high profile figures named in the criminal charges were the tip of the iceberg, legal sources say. Detectives from Scotland Yard's counter terrorism unit, who investigated the tapping, uncovered a string of other targets: figures including two government ministers, footballers, a newspaper editor, celebrities and models. Wed, 29 Nov 2006 17:44:34 +0100 LA, CA - A former phone company employee acquitted in September of perjury has been indicted by a federal grand jury on similar charges stemming from the wiretapping case against Hollywood private investigator Anthony Pellicano.
The grand jury returned the three-count indictment against Joann Wiggan, 52, on Nov. 22 but it wasn't released until Tuesday by the U.S. attorney's office. If convicted of the three perjury counts, Wiggan faces a maximum of 15 years in prison. Wed, 29 Nov 2006 16:52:22 +0100 ![]()
If you find one of these, relax, it is not a bug.Here is what you have... "The Annoy-a-tron ...very effective at disturbing that guy in the sales department or your "friend" down the hall. With its thin design and embedded magnet for easy hiding, the Annoy-a-tron can be placed in a variety of locations. Select one of the three sound choices (2 kHz, 12 kHz, or alternating) and push the switch to the on position. Place it in a proper hiding spot and let the "fun" begin. The Annoy-a-tron generates a short (but very annoying, hence the name) beep every few minutes. Your unsuspecting target will have a hard time 'timing' the location of the sound because the beeps will vary in intervals ranging from 2 to 8 minutes. The 2kHz sound is generically annoying enough, but if you really really want to aggravate somebody, select the 12 kHz sound. Trust us. The higher frequency and slight 'electronic noise' built into that soundbyte will make a full-grown Admin wonder where his packets are. Assuming you have done your part in selecting a suitable hiding location for the Annoy-a-tron, it will do its part to drive your co-workers slowly mad with its short and seemingly random beeps. And when someone does locate the Annoy-a-tron, they're really not going to know what it is - which is almost as much fun as watching them search for it. Muahaha." Unfortunately, some bugs look very much like this little bugger... so keep our number handy. Wed, 29 Nov 2006 16:28:52 +0100 Extortionography Example # 382
TN - In the wake of a report investigating bugging devices found in the local Homeland Security office, two Shelby County employees face disciplinary action. The report, which was released Tuesday, primarily focused on how erroneous information was released to the media that indicated the FBI conducted the bug sweep. The report didn't discuss who placed the listening devices -- revealed as four "Safety 1st" baby monitors -- or what information they recorded, if any. "We still have the case under investigation. We hope to wrap it up this week," department spokesman Steve Shular said. "So far, the case has not revealed any criminal wrongdoing." (WTF!?!?) The controversy erupted in late October after Fox 13 News said it had 27 hours of secretly recorded material from the Homeland Security office. Former interim administrator John Todd admitted using a pocket device to record meetings, but denied any knowledge of the ceiling bugs. (WTF!?!?) Tue, 28 Nov 2006 18:10:44 +0100 Australia - An aged-care centre head who made improper payments to a Melbourne underworld figure and an assistant who secretly taped board meetings have failed in their bid to sue a former employer for wrongful dismissal.
Alleged death threats, phone bugging operations and under-the-table payments to underworld figure Mick Gatto to smooth relations with building unions were among the more titillating revelations to emerge. Justice Mandie also condemned the conduct of the two executives over the payment of $234,650 to Mr Gatto's company Arbitrations & Mediations and the bugging of Primelife employees' telephones without their consent. Ms Porter amassed 1.3 million minutes of recordings from 65,400 phone calls she taped between July 2001 and June 2003. Justice Mandie said he believed that Ms Porter's eavesdropping was for the sole purpose of gathering information on colleagues she believed to have conflicts with Mr Sent, rather that to identify a "leak", as she had previously claimed in court. Tue, 28 Nov 2006 15:15:31 +0100 You can tell when you hear someone is really angry—and get out of the way. Now Sigard, a new software package developed by Sound Intelligence, can also detect verbal aggression with a high level of accuracy.Combined with closed circuit television systems, Sigard can quickly notify security personnel about loud, angry people in outdoor public spaces, public transportation, nightclubs and bars. Sigard Sound Intelligence software imitates the way that humans deal with sound, splitting it into different frequencies with varying amounts of energy. Just as a person can immediately detect anger and aggression in the midst of background noise, Sound Intelligence software "listens" for the same parameters that humans use in detecting aggressive speech. This system is already in place in a few locations in the Netherlands. Police in the UK are also considering installing the system. Tue, 28 Nov 2006 15:11:10 +0100 Employers are getting better tools to keep watch on their workers.
Employers have long warned their workers that company e-mail, Internet use and even phone calls are subject to monitoring. But what many employees don't realize is that spying is going high-tech. In the spirit of James Bond wizardry, companies are tracking workers' whereabouts through Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite, implanting employees with microchips with their knowledge and hiring private investigators to check up on what employees are really doing at work. Tue, 28 Nov 2006 15:09:09 +0100 You don't need 007's "Q" to listen in on coded broadcasts that are transmitted to spies in faraway places.
Anybody can tune in to the world's top spy agencies talking to operatives in harm's way. All you need is a cheap shortwave radio receiver - the kind available at any drugstore. Tune it to 6855 kHz or 8010 on the hour. You might hear a girlish voice repeating strings of numbers in a Spanish monotone. "Nueve, uno, nueve, tres, cinco-cinco, quatro, cinco, tres, dos ..." went one seemingly harmless message heard last week on a Grundig radio. It was the Cuban Intelligence Directorate or Russian FSB broadcasting coded instructions from Havana to spies inside the U.S. Turn the dial up to 11545 kHz and you might hear a few notes of an obscure English folk song called the "Lincolnshire Poacher," followed by a voice repeating strings of numbers. That's believed to be British MI6 broadcasting from Cyprus. On 6840 kHz, you may hear a voice reading groups of letters. That's a station nicknamed "E10," which is suspected to be Israel's Mossad intelligence. Chris Smolinski runs SpyNumbers.com and the "Spooks" e-mail list, where "number stations" hobbyists dutifully log hundreds of clandestine shortwave messages transmitted every month. Tue, 28 Nov 2006 14:56:29 +0100 What to Do When They Don't Hire You, But Steal Your Ideas...
It's painful enough when an employer rejects you. But some add insult to injury by stealing material you prepared to promote your candidacy. How should you cope? There's no surefire cure... No one knows how often companies rip off original material from applicants. But job tryouts requiring submission of business plans are increasingly common, reports Gary E. Hayes, a managing partner at Hayes Brunswick & Partners, a New York organizational and management consultancy. He predicts the trend will persist because bosses prefer to pick people who "begin to execute very rapidly." You can take several steps to guard against possible employer theft during the interview process. Offer samples of the outstanding work you have completed rather than craft something new. If the hiring manager insists on fresh samples, show off your brainpower without giving away all the goods. "Exclude necessary details that would then make [a proposal] impossible to implement," says Richard Bayer, chief operating officer of the Five O'Clock Club, a career-counseling network in New York. If you do submit a plan, take a strong stance to protect your ideas. Whenever you express yourself in writing, "the copyright attaches at that point," notes Alan Weisberg, an intellectual-property attorney for Christopher & Weisberg in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. He suggests adding a copyright symbol to the report, plus a confidentiality warning stating: "This information is being provided solely for the purposes of the job interview" and may not be used for other purposes without the author's permission. Mon, 27 Nov 2006 23:13:15 +0100 Several companies now offer encryption for cell phones...
Global Tek Sigillu Trust Digital Information Security Corporation Mon, 27 Nov 2006 21:35:21 +0100 CA - It made perfect sense when Hyundai Motor hired a veteran Toyota engineer named Bruce Shibuya in 2003 to run its quality control unit in Chino, Calif. ... Shibuya, an American, had worked at Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A. Inc.'s headquarters in Torrance, Calif. But as much as Hyundai benefited from Shibuya's 18 years of Toyota experience, it may have learned more from the secret company documents he brought along with him. ... Shibuya's actions were so galling to Hyundai engineers that one of them anonymously leaked word of it to Toyota this year. ... Shibuya ordered her to make copies of numerous Toyota documents and mail them to Hyundai headquarters in Korea. ... "It was not a few documents. It was binders and binders of information." The individual spoke anonymously for fear of reprisal from the company. ... "It was technical reports and their European quality-control model." It was high-protein stuff, said another Hyundai employee. "This wasn't just paint codes," he said. "This was something that should have been kept confidential." ... Law enforcement sources say corporate espionage cases - like those of recently indicted former executives at Metaldyne Corp. - are part of a growing problem.
Perhaps the most famous theft of automotive intellectual property involved the departure of General Motors purchasing czar J. Ignacio Lopez for Volkswagen in 1993. ... But Lopez's actions came before the invention of powerful computing tools that are now common. The 20 boxes of data Lopez hustled past security would now fit into a multigigabyte flash drive that would fit in his pocket. Mon, 27 Nov 2006 14:36:46 +0100 UK - Police are considering installing a next generation of CCTV camera that is powerful enough to record people’s conversations up to 100 yards away.
Ultra sensitive microphones may be attached to surveillance systems across the UK, so law enforcement has the chance to thwart aggressive behaviour before it turns violent. Councils and transport authorities have also reportedly expressed interest in installing the new systems before the London Olympics in 2012. Sun, 26 Nov 2006 17:47:18 +0100 What is spyware?
What is a keystroke logger? A few examples... SpyGatorPro (monitor all computer activity) KGB Keylogger KGB Spy (keylogger) KeyPhantom (hardware keylogger PC & Mac) KGB Free Key Logger Keylogger King Pro Keylogger King Home Free Keylogger King SnoopStick Remote Monitor (remote monitoring using a USB flashstick) Numara™ Track-It! (logging and tracking) WebWatcher (remote web tracking) Keystroke Recorder TypeRecorder (keylogger for Macintosh) Spector Pro (monitors and sends out alerts) Spector (Macintosh version) eBlaster (email/chat/IM snitch) Spector CNE (business employee monitor) Spector 360 (business monitoring & reporting) KeyGhost RoboNanny (spy microphone) Advanced Call Recorder (phone call recorder) Telephone Spy (phone call recorder) CSSS Video Pro (computer video spy with motion detection) How to identify and eradicate SpyWare... Lots of folks will be happy to sell you their solutions. Sun, 26 Nov 2006 16:38:49 +0100 The results from the CIA's personality quiz are just a few clicks away, diagnosing test takers as daring thrill-seekers, thoughtful observers, curious adventurers, innovative pioneers or impressive masterminds.
The CIA wants to hire them all. Sun, 26 Nov 2006 16:17:54 +0100 The Skype peer-to-peer protocol is designed to penetrate firewalls: experts emphasise the potential security risks of the Skype peer-to-peer protocol and say the use of Skype in a corporate network significantly increases traffic volumes. One company claims to have some tools to stop it...
Sun, 26 Nov 2006 16:14:13 +0100 Police on Thanksgiving hurled a barrage of charges against the husband of the Stillwater Lakes woman shot to death last weekend.
Police say Gonzalez (husband) was stalking Claudio (wife) and had been recording his wife's phone calls without her knowledge. Gonzalez is charged with criminal homicide, being a person not allowed to own, use, manufacture, control, sell or transfer firearms, endangering the welfare of children, stalking, recklessly endangering another, simple assault, and wiretapping. Wed, 22 Nov 2006 21:06:57 +0100 "Right now I would say that China is the No. 1 counterintelligence threat to the United States," says Dave Szady, the FBI's former top counterespionage official. "It's a very large threat, it's pervasive and it's extremely effective."
U.S. officials say there are now 400 active investigations here involving illegal exports to China — more than any other country. "We've seen a significant spike in attempts to illegally acquire U.S. technology," says Stephen Bogni, with U.S. Immigrations and Customs Enforcement. ...officials warn that U.S. corporations and universities are not sufficiently on guard to protect against this growing and pervasive threat. The Chinese government tells NBC News that it does not engage in espionage in the U.S., calling such accusations irresponsible. Wed, 22 Nov 2006 14:56:07 +0100 A federal judge said Monday she will postpone the wiretapping trial of Hollywood private eye Anthony Pellicano and several other co-defendants to next Aug. 22.
U.S. District Judge Dale Fischer had originally scheduled trial for February, but the case against Pellicano and six other defendants has been delayed by a lengthy discovery process. Wed, 22 Nov 2006 05:12:34 +0100
WiLife Spy Cam Alarm Clock Peeps Digitally, Over Powerline "Due to high demand, this product is on back order. We expect to ship back orders around January 15, 2007." Mon, 20 Nov 2006 17:44:14 +0100 A Russian former spy investigating the murder of a journalist who criticized President Vladimir Putin's policies is seriously ill after being poisoned in London.
Alexander Litvinenko, 41, was contaminated with the slow-acting toxin thallium, clinical toxicologist John Henry said in a statement outside University College Hospital... Litvinenko told the British Broadcasting Corp. last week, before his condition worsened, that he began feeling ill on Nov. 1 after meeting with an informant at a Japanese sushi restaurant, Itsu, in London's Piccadilly. The man gave him papers containing the names of people who may have been involved in the killing of Russian journalist Anna Politkovskaya, Litvinenko said. Politkovskaya, 48, a prominent critic of Putin and Russian policy in Chechnya, was shot dead at her Moscow apartment building on Oct. 7. Litvinenko, a former lieutenant colonel in Russia's FSB or Federal Security Service, successor to the KGB, claimed asylum in the U.K. six years ago and became an outspoken critic of the Kremlin over issues including the conflict in Chechnya. His poisoning echoes Cold War assassinations like that of Georgi Markov, a Bulgarian dissident who died after being spiked with a poison-tipped umbrella on a London street in 1978. British newspapers including the Times identified Litvinenko's contact at the sushi restaurant as an Italian academic who, they reported, subsequently went into hiding, fearing for his life. Doctors said, "Litvinenko's chances of survival were "50-50." Mon, 20 Nov 2006 17:28:40 +0100 Western Australia's former corruption fighter Moira Rayner "stepped over the line through mateship" when she tipped off a dying friend that his mobile telephone was bugged as part of a corruption inquiry.
The friend, former clerk of parliament Laurie Marquet, immediately stopped using his telephone - frustrating and compromising the Corruption and Crime Commission inquiry, a Perth District Court jury was told yesterday. Mon, 20 Nov 2006 00:46:43 +0100 Chinese scientists have developed a robot that can help ensure security in public places. The robot, the first of its kind developed in China, is expected to go on sale within two or three months. ... Equipped with Pan-Tilt-Zoom (PTZ) and wide-angle cameras, it uses ultrasonic equipment to avoid obstacles and transmits information on suspect sights and noises, such as fires, to a controller. ...looking like a small car, is 90 centimeters long, 55 centimeters wide and 75 centimeters high, and weighs 55 kilograms. (Get outtaline and it'll kneecap ya'.)
Sun, 19 Nov 2006 22:45:30 +0100 India - Aniruddha Bahal is the most feared reporter in India. Using spycams, he dramatically exposes corruption in the world's largest democracy - and has even toppled its president.
Sun, 19 Nov 2006 16:23:10 +0100 "Eavesdropping is an underrated form of information gathering."
Sat, 18 Nov 2006 15:00:39 +0100 Tehran – Offering detailed print of subscribers’ contacts, or SMS contents to non-senders is a crime, equals eavesdropping, and doers so will be referred to judiciary, said an MCCI official here Wednesday.
Managing Director of the Mobile Communications Company of Iran’s (MCCI) Supervision, Evaluation, and Responding to Complaints Department Teymour Karami added in an interview with the ICT’s CINA dispatch, “Such things might have happened in the past, but they will not happen in the future." Sat, 18 Nov 2006 14:51:37 +0100 "According to the Greek news sites, the Greek Information Security Authority ΑΔΑΕ (ADAE) has decided not to investigate Ericsson for their involvement in the wiretapping scandal that was revealed in February of this year. As the "reason" they state that the law does not give their agency the role to investigate the manufacturers of telecoms equipment. Apparently this decision came out of a 4-3 vote, where 2 of the minority votes were by specialists from the investigative unit of ADAE."
(It's Greek to me.) Sat, 18 Nov 2006 14:04:07 +0100 ...signed, Awkward in Auckland"
A New Zealand scientist believes he's captured a recording of the mystery hum that has been heard by scores of people living and in and around the city of Auckland. (Here. Here. Hear it here.) Fri, 17 Nov 2006 19:27:21 +0100 UK - Two MI6 officers have given a rare interview to tell the public: James Bond isn't real.
The secret intelligence service duo were authorised to give an interview in which they described 007's licence to kill as "a complete myth".
But they revealed there is a real-life Q testing spy gadgets. And they insisted the spying business can be dangerous but "quite glamorous". The unnamed male and female officer spoke to Radio 1 DJ Colin Murray for Wednesday night's show. Fri, 17 Nov 2006 18:34:49 +0100 UK - A fraudster outwitted sophisticated banking security systems by using an ordinary MP3 music player to bug cash machines and steal customers’ credit card secrets. (By wiretapping the phone line and recording the transmissions.)
Fri, 17 Nov 2006 18:25:25 +0100 ... as it may be watching you!
Spain - Two 17-year-olds were arrested in Alicante on Wednesday and charged with writing a Trojan horse that allowed them to control the webcams of compromised machines at a local college. The duo allegedly used potentially embarrassing footage obtained through the ruse to blackmail victims. ... ...not the first time Spanish police have faced webcam-related online crime, net security firm Sophos notes. In February 2005 a Spanish computer student was fined for spying on a young woman using her webcam, as well as monitoring her online chat conversations. Related stories... Peeping Tom Trojan suspect cuffed in Cyprus Webcam Trojan perv gets slapped wrist Webcam Trojan suspect arrested in Spain Meet the Peeping Tom worm "If your computer is infected and you have a webcam plugged in, then everything you do in front of the computer can be seen, and everything you say can be recorded." Fri, 17 Nov 2006 17:52:36 +0100 With a quick search one can find information and detailed plans for building many types of eavesdropping, wiretapping and bugging devices. One of the most intriguing projects is the "Laser Beam Eavesdropping" system. Here is a brief list of what's out there... Laser Eavesdropping Systems - What & How. Laser Listening Schematic Build A Laser Listening Device Laser Listening Systems Russian - Laser Listener Another Russian - Laser Listener Surveillance Electronic Circuit Schematics and our contribution... Laser Beam Eavesdropping - Si-fi Bugs? Fri, 17 Nov 2006 15:00:52 +0100 FL - A judge on Thursday granted a motion to dismiss a felony wiretapping charge against Charlie Grapski, who was charged with taping Alachua City Manager Clovis Watson Jr. against his will in May.
Senior Judge Aymer "Buck" Curtain on Thursday dismissed the charge of illegal interception of wireless communications, a felony, against Grapski on the grounds that as a public official in a public office, Watson had no expectation of privacy. Wed, 15 Nov 2006 16:50:31 +0100 You can now be tracked with a cell phone! Anywhere. Any time. (from the manufacturer's web site...) "World Tracker SMS, affordable personal location. No external battery or antenna required, entire functioning GPS Tracker fits in the palm of your hand. Receive movement and location alerts through your cell phone or e-mail. Users can view or print driving reports with street addresses, and receive location alerts via e-mail or cell phone. Features an unmatched combination of maps, satellite images, and aerial photography to cover the entire planet." (Yes, you can have us check your executives' vehicles for these little buggers, too.) Wed, 15 Nov 2006 16:23:09 +0100 TANGRAM
The false pattern recognition problems inherent in guilt-by-association investigation methods is finally being addressed... we hope. Wed, 15 Nov 2006 16:07:31 +0100 This wireless, waterproof, privacy-invader pegged our Voyeurometer and made it smoke! Sold as... "This great device can watch your bathroom and work as a radio with a mirror or discreet high resolution .1 lux color camera. Comes with a powerful 2.4 ghz usb compatible receiver and software to watch it wirelessly on your computer, or record to a vcr. or both!" A security camera in the shower?!?! What next... Evidence collection bags to CSI who leaves hair in the soap? Wed, 15 Nov 2006 15:24:27 +0100 (Press Release) Germany - Privacy is a thing of the past. The unthinkable has occurred: No mobile communications between people are transferred over a wire line, and no more SMS messages can be sent without potentially being recorded by third parties, competitors or spouses. Simply by sending an invisible and unnoticeable SMS message to a particular cell phone, spying on cell phone users has become child's play. Wilfried Hafner, CEO of SecurStar GmbH, has developed a Trojan horse, named "RexSpy", solely for demonstration purposes. The results are alarming. When the Trojan invades the system, the security vulnerabilities discovered by Hafner show the possibility of eavesdropping on any cell phone. (Of course, they offer a solution.)
Tue, 14 Nov 2006 18:22:55 +0100 Internet cameras let police peek into businesses
WI - Owner Linda Burg isn't expecting trouble at the Little Read Book store at 7603 W. State St. But she, and the police, are ready if it shows. Burg and the Wauwatosa Police Department are testing a new camera and surveillance system that lets the shopkeeper check in from anywhere, anytime over the Internet and, more important, gives police an inside view in real time in the event of an emergency. Internet-based cameras are nothing new. But Wauwatosa police believe they are the first law-enforcement agency in Wisconsin to link them to their dispatch computers, allowing dispatchers and patrol officers to see what's going on inside an address en route to a 911 call. Tue, 14 Nov 2006 16:08:49 +0100 Taiwan - The Bureau of Investigation (BOI) yesterday denied that it has been bugging the telephones of opposition Legislator Chiu Yi...
Sat, 11 Nov 2006 13:57:17 +0100 It seems Homeland Security might need a good exterminator. Last month, four electronic listening devices -- often called "bugs" -- were found above the ceiling tiles of the local office of Homeland Security, the department charged with protecting the United States from terrorism.
If that sounds like an all-too-brief assessment of a potentially life-threatening situation, that's because many of the details -- including the reason for and the perpetrator behind the bugging -- are uncertain. County officials initially indicated that the devices were found during an FBI sweep but later retracted that statement. Kevin Murray is the founder of Murray Associates, an independent consulting firm specializing in audio eavesdropping, video voyeurism, and espionage countermeasures. He says if you think you have found a bug, do not... Questions answered... - How easy is it to obtain a "bug"? - What kinds of listening devices are available? - What is the typical transmitting range? - What's the penalty for illegal audio surveillance? - How do you detect a bug? Thu, 09 Nov 2006 21:47:13 +0100 CA - Five family members allegedly worked together to copy and encrypt technical information on U.S. warship technologies in preparation for a "surreptitious delivery" to China.
Thu, 09 Nov 2006 17:23:57 +0100 I am occasionally asked by colleagues for recommendations on eavesdropping detection instrumentation. One of the more common questions is about our Thermal Emissions Spectrum Analysis™ (TESA) instrumentation.
--- "Kevin, can you recommend an affordable thermal imager?" I'll do my best, but first, here is what you really want to know... "How do I choose a thermal imager which will clearly see the very small heat differentials created by electronic eavesdropping devices?" There are many grades of imagers out there. In all cases... - Clearly means High Resolution which = a 640 x 480 pixel (or 512 pixel) detector. - See means Sensitivity which = an NETD (noise equivalent temperature difference) of <40mK (preferably <18mK). One other important consideration... "What portion of the IR spectrum is best for TSCM work?" Answer: Mid-IR Although imagers with alternate specifications may see "hot" items like some video cameras, they will not see all the other items you want to find. High Resolution + Sensitivity = higher Price. A TSCM-capable imager costs about $40-60k. Cheap ones cost about $8-10k. There is not much to choose from in-between other than the 160 x 120, 80mK units in the $20k range. The major US manufacturer to check is Flir. Other manufacturers. Good first investments (books)... Alien Vision: Exploring the Electromagnetic Spectrum with Imaging Technology Infrared Detectors and Systems (Wiley Series in Pure and Applied Optics) Final Thoughts Employ technology which really works. Save until you can afford it, or lease it. But, don't buy an inadequate imager just so you can say you have one. That's dishonest. ~Kevin Thu, 09 Nov 2006 15:29:37 +0100 "If I go down in espionage history, it may well be for perfecting the use of sex in spying," Markus Wolf, the East German spymaster who planted some 4,000 agents in the West -- including a top aide to West German Chancellor Willy Brandt -- and sent seductive "Romeo" agents to steal secrets from lonely government secretaries, wrote in his memoirs. Mr. Wolf died early this morning in his Berlin apartment at the age of 83, the Associated Press reports.
Wed, 08 Nov 2006 19:50:47 +0100 Wed, 08 Nov 2006 18:43:43 +0100 ...Matthew Fiddler hunched over a door lock, jiggling it with a pick and poking it with a wrench. In just a few moments, it popped open.
Mr. Fiddler wasn't locked out and he isn't a thief. Instead, the 36-year-old father of four, clad in khakis and a blue button-down shirt, was seated around a table with a handful of people who pick locks for fun. The group, a chapter of Locksport International, gets together monthly to poke and prod everything from padlocks to dead-bolt cylinders. They swap tips, hold contests and eat pizza. Most say they do it for the challenge. ... Organized groups of lock-picking hobbyists have operated in Europe for years, and have recently been increasing in North America. Locksport International started last year and has 100 members in six chapters in the U.S. and Canada. The Netherlands-based Open Organisation of Lockpickers (TOOOL) formally launched a U.S. group in August and so far has 40 members. The hobby is also becoming popular on college campuses: students at the University of Texas, Austin, recently launched a picking group. Police and lock manufacturers say they get worried when pickers swap tips on the message boards of lockpicking101.com, a Web site for lock-picking enthusiasts, and post how-to demonstration videos on the popular video-sharing site YouTube.com. Wed, 08 Nov 2006 15:19:38 +0100 If your spy pen blinks for more than 5 seconds - and you are not using your cell phone - you might be carrying a bugged cell phone! Wed, 08 Nov 2006 15:06:03 +0100 It turns out the CIA had been spying on Iran by renting a line in a Turkish satellite through a dummy corporation. After a warning came from Tehran, Ankara cut off the line.
Mon, 06 Nov 2006 15:48:18 +0100 Canada - British Columbia's attorney general says he is concerned that an RCMP wiretap recorded an innocent phone call between Premier Gordon Campbell and his then-finance minister in 2003, slightly before police raided the legislature in late December. ...
The court heard police obtained a wiretap for a government cellular phone without telling the authorizing judge it was a government phone. Mon, 06 Nov 2006 03:07:06 +0100 Kansas City, KS - Philip Daniel Ramer, 21, of Overland Park, was charged with two misdemeanors, eavesdropping and property damage, after being accused of spying on a female neighbor in an apartment building at 11914 Birch St. Police said Ramer was arrested after the woman complained to apartment management that her heating vent was not working.
Police determined that a neighbor had been climbing through the heat duct for about a month to watch the woman. Sat, 28 Oct 2006 20:50:53 +0200 India (sports) - Indian skipper Rahul Dravid today accused the media of "eavesdropping" in the instance of coach Greg Chappell giving a dressing down to the players during a practice session, and said a "private conversation" was taken out of context and blown out of proportion. ...
He said it was "unfortunate" that the conversation had been heard and more regrettable was that it was taken out of context. Indirectly referring to the cut-throat competition among the media these days, he said, "These are times when even private conversations are heard and people think they can eavesdrop and then blow it out of proportion." Sat, 28 Oct 2006 10:36:03 +0200 There is a big new development tonight in the scandal at the Shelby County Homeland Security Office. A county employee is suspended tonight after bugging devices were found in the ceiling of the office.
At this point county leaders won't say why the employee was suspended, but we do know there are a lot of questions surrounding who planted the bugs, how the bugs were discovered. At first, Shelby County said the bugs were found during an FBI sweep. Late today, the story changed and the FBI wasn't involved. Its just the latest twist into the homeland security scandal. In August, John Todd lost his job as the Homeland Security Director. Earlier this month Todd blew the whistle. Eyewitness news was the first station to tell you about Todds accusations of wasted homeland security money. Weeks later, on October 17th, four bugs were found in the ceiling of the homeland security office. (Just coincidence? Extortionography strikes again. One good reason why quarterly inspections are part of a complete corporate security program.) Fri, 27 Oct 2006 17:03:47 +0200 It is unusual to see a blatantly misleading headline in Forbes magazine. It is even more unusual to see a Forbes article containing inaccurate and sophomoric advice. Some balance is needed. Specifics relevant to my craft are the only points addressed here.
First, take a break, read the "How To (Legally) Spy On Employees" and its sidebar "Are You Being Watched?" (Still not sure why these two go together.) Then, come back. None of five suggestions alluded to in the headline even remotely smells like spying. Yes, the list may be good common sense, but it is not the foundation for an effective corporate information security program. See what you think... "Try Google first." "Be honest." "Create a policy--and make it public." "Be nice to journalists." "Brush up on all those pesky legal issues." On to the pontifications with high cringe factor... - "Hewlett-Packard has given spying a bad name." (So, when has spying ever had a good name?) - "Without permission, there are only two ways to get phone records legally: Obtaining a warrant or digging through the trash." (Bad advice. Law enforcement obtains Warrants, not private individuals. Digging through a person's trash for their home phone records is indeed illegal under some state laws, and if you have to trespass to get to the trash.) - "An acoustic noise generator will mask your conversation in case there's a bug in the room." (Wrong. Acoustic noise generators mitigate sound migration to other areas. If you can hear the other person in your meeting talking to you, so can a bug. A properly placed noise generator simply reduces the chance that a person on the other side of the wall will hear both of you.) - "Get A Scrambler... it should keep anyone from listening to your call." (No, not 'anyone', just wiretappers. You still need to be concerned with eavesdroppers, room bugs, voice recorders, etc. in areas at both ends of the call. There is a whole lot more you need to know about this subject. Click here and here.) And, finally... - "Track Down Bugs - Bug detectors and phone tap detectors can tell you whether anyone is trying to listen in." (Eavesdroppers pray you will buy these gadgets and preform do-it-yourself brain surgery. Please, just call me. We really are your cheapest insurance against electronic surveillance.) ~Kevin Fri, 27 Oct 2006 15:34:29 +0200 Patrik Runald, Senior Security Specialist, F-Secure feels that the most common threat is the loss of confidential information due to someone eavesdropping on the conversation or not speaking to the person you think you’re speaking. “The other threat is someone hacking into the phone system and making calls in your name, essentially hijacking the phone lines and DoS attacks where the phone system becomes unavailable because someone is overloading it with data traffic,” he adds.
Eavesdropping through interception and duplication is another significant threat. In eavesdropping, access can be gained through any access point to a voice network (particularly if there are wireless access points on the same network that supports the VoIP service). Once access has been gained, network sniffers can be used to intercept IP traffic. Best practices - Separate voice and data into virtual LANs (VLANs) - Use intelligent firewalls that understand voice - Use IP Telephony Authentication and Encryption - Change the default setting in Skype so that it doesn’t allow phone calls from anyone that’s not on your contact list - Enforce an effective password policy - Turn off and remove services that are not needed - Always keep patch levels up-to-date Fri, 27 Oct 2006 15:17:53 +0200 Kansas - Smith County agrees to repay some withheld wages to its ousted sheriff. Republicans chose Ellsworth Murphy as sheriff last summer after the previous sheriff resigned. Murphy had been sheriff from 1989 to 1991 but was forced to resign after being convicted of official misconduct in office and one misdemeanor count of illegal eavesdropping.
Thu, 26 Oct 2006 17:47:34 +0200 Murray Associates
Eavesdropping Audits with Counterespionage Consulting ====================================================== Important News... ====================================================== Spybusters, LLC dba Murray Associates is our new official name. *** Please adjust any records you may have for us. *** Everything else remains the same... Murray Associates P.O. Box 668 Oldwick, NJ 08858-0668 (USA) +1-908-832-7900 http://www.spybusters.com Thank you! ====================================================== Points of Interest... ====================================================== Our Transition to Government / Military Level TSCM - FutureWatch™ As prices fall and "Q / 007" type surveillance devices become Internet-easy to obtain, we're ramping up... big time. The goal... 100% government-level detection capabilities. Sneak preview - Our 2006-2007 R&D efforts and instrumentation... SpyCams - A brief history of covert video cameras, and our 20-year cat-and-mouse detection quest... Security Colleagues - Make us Your TSCM Team Provide your business clients with a real counter-eavesdropping solution. Thank you for your time! Kevin Thu, 26 Oct 2006 17:35:23 +0200 New York - A state trooper is accusing the New York State Police, the New York City Police Department and the Queens County district attorney of conspiring to illegally eavesdrop on his phone conversations and fabricate evidence against him.
The lawsuit was filed yesterday in federal court for the Southern District of New York by Trooper Todd Bohmer of Troop K, based in Poughkeepsie.
Bohmer is suing for $2 million in damages and $4 million in punitive damages. Thu, 26 Oct 2006 15:40:47 +0200 Rome - A fresh spy furore erupted in Italy on Thursday involving Premier Romano Prodi and his family. ...
Last month, Italy was rocked by a massive wiretap scandal involving telecommunications giant Telecom and its parent company, the tyre group Pirelli. A bugging ring was uncovered which had gathered illicit data on politicians, businessmen and media figures as well as ordinary Italians but it is not yet known for what ends and for whom. Thu, 26 Oct 2006 15:26:48 +0200 Los Angeles - Imprisoned private investigator Anthony Pellicano said he rejected numerous attempts by federal prosecutors to negotiate a plea bargain in his Hollywood wiretap case because he didn't want to break the trust of celebrities, lawyers and other former clients.
The private eye has pleaded not guilty to racketeering and wiretapping charges and is scheduled for trial next year. ... Federal prosecutors said months ago that at least one more indictment was coming. But no new defendants have been named since "Die Hard" director John McTiernan was charged in early April. Authorities also are struggling to decrypt hundreds of recorded telephone calls recovered during FBI searches of Pellicano's offices. Wed, 25 Oct 2006 14:48:22 +0200 Republic of Macedonia - It is only an open secret that all major political parties, which means a total of four, have wiretapping devices. Tito Petkovski, the leader of the ruling coalition ally New Social Democratic Party, said this on Tuesday at a parliamentary commission's session, whose agenda included reviewing of the draft-law on monitoring of electronic communication. ...
n February 2001, just before the outbreak of the Conflict in Macedonia, the leader of SDSM at the time, Branko Crvenkovski, made public shorthand records on thousands of tapped conversation, accusing the then ruling coalition allies VMRO DPMNE and DPA of having conducted the wiretapping operations. All victims, mostly public officials, have confirmed the authenticity of the records, including 17 journalists, who filed lawsuits against the state. The legal proceedings produced no result whatsoever even five years after the outset. Tue, 24 Oct 2006 18:30:09 +0200 Atlanta, GA - The two men accused of plotting with a secretary at Coca-Cola Co. to steal trade secrets from the beverage maker and trying to sell them to archrival PepsiCo Inc. each pleaded guilty Monday to one count of conspiracy.
Tue, 24 Oct 2006 03:00:51 +0200 NY - A former Ticonderoga emergency-services dispatcher accused of sexual misconduct with a 16-year-old girl now faces a new charge: electronic eavesdropping.
Michael Alteri, 33, Ticonderoga was indicted by an Essex County grand jury on a felony eavesdropping charge. Ticonderoga Town Police executed a search warrant at his home recently and found a selection of videotapes from a hidden video camera he allegedly installed at the residence of Jessica Alteri, his ex-wife, in January 2002. She is employed as a deputy sheriff by the Essex County Sheriff's Department. (candidate for the 2006 Dumb and Dumber Award) Mon, 23 Oct 2006 15:24:52 +0200 CA - ...the day after The Chronicle broke a story about the "Fajitagate" scandal involving the San Francisco Police Department, police investigators began searching for the source who leaked an internal memo that was key to the piece.
...Investigators sifted through three months of phone calls made to and from the press room -- 52 pages of phone bills in total -- before focusing on calls made during a 10-hour period on Dec. 12, 2002. They say they listened to no phone conversations and the practice hasn't been repeated. While the leaker was never found and the case is now closed... From the spying scandal at Hewlett-Packard to the imposition of federal prison sentences last month on Chronicle reporters Lance Williams and Mark Fainaru-Wada for refusing to disclose their sources for grand jury transcripts, and the search for who leaked information that identified CIA operative Valerie Wilson, the hunt for leakers continues to encroach on ground the press has long considered sacred. (Methods used to gain inside information may include illegal electronic eavesdropping. Methods used to investigate leak suspects may include illegal electronic eavesdropping. No mater which side of the fence you are on, you will want to use our services.) Mon, 23 Oct 2006 00:09:56 +0200 Pittsburgh, PA - A Beaver County school janitor was sentenced to 10 years in prison yesterday on charges that he installed a camera to peep at girls and women using a toilet at Center Area Middle School.
Phillip D. Winkle, 32, of Aliquippa, pleaded guilty to one count of possessing child pornography on June 19. At the time, he agreed to serve the maximum 10-year prison term. According to the prosecution, Mr. Winkle drilled a hole in the wall that separated the girls' lower-level bathroom from a storage room. He then set up a peephole camera that looked into one stall. (stop snickering) Sun, 22 Oct 2006 15:35:12 +0200 The technologies, which were originally developed for eavesdropping, have been employed by customer service agents to get a better idea of customers' moods. Donna Fluss, principal with DMG Consulting LLC in West Orange, N.J., said emotion detection, which tracks volume and pitch, grew out of voice verification technology.
Forrester Research of Cambridge, Mass., said sales of "emotion detection" technology to corporate call centers has reached $400 million annually. Forrester said sales are still growing for the systems and a related technology known as "speech analytics,"... (Sortalike a large hate thermometer.) Sat, 21 Oct 2006 15:30:34 +0200 Robots Gone Wild - Your own WiFi Snooping Alter Ego Creepy Peepy
via Akihabara... "Bandai will offer in Japan around mid-December a new robot entirely controlled remotely thru its Wi-Fi connection. It has a webcam to allow you to see where it goes, a battery life of 2.5 hours, and weights 980g total. It also has 3 sensors (Sensor Monitor) to avoid bumping into things. You will be able to communicate with the robot via email. I can’t wait for a waterproof version to send the robot into the girls’ showers at the University..!" Wed, 18 Oct 2006 16:59:26 +0200 The State of Florida has filed felony wiretapping charges against election reform activist Charles Grapski for audiotaping his efforts to obtain public records related to his investigation of alleged election fraud...
"This is such a severe case of silencing and a violation of the First Amendment," said Carol Thomas, co-coordinator of Grapski's defense committee, along with Scott Doran. Grapski audiotaped City Manager Clovis Watson, who commented on the fact that he was being taped, consented, and kept talking, Thomas noted. Subsequently Watson, who also serves as Police Commissioner (an apparent violation of Florida law that prohibits officials from holding more than one public office at a time), ordered Grapski arrested. "He didn't do anything a newspaper reporter doesn't do every day. It's absurd," Thomas said. "While he was being arrested, the editor of a newspaper was in there audiotaping this." Tue, 17 Oct 2006 22:58:00 +0200 UK - An undercover policeman who suffered a stroke caused by the stress of a botched "bugging" operation has won a £2m payout.
The Greater Manchester detective was left physically and mentally drained after he tried to attach a tracking device to a car belonging to a violent gang of robbers drinking in a nearby pub. He had to return to the car on NINE occasions and reattach the device because the batteries which powered it kept failing. Two days later, he suffered a stroke and he continues to suffer psychiatric problems. Tue, 17 Oct 2006 22:51:57 +0200 Israel - The director general of the President's Residence, Moshe Goral, was involved in eavesdropping activities, say the police investigators who have been looking into the suspicions against President Moshe Katsav.
According to testimony gathered, Goral played a central role in setting up the mechanism used for eavesdropping when Kastsav moved into the residence. Much of the information received by police came from a former security officer who left the President's Residence several months ago. From the testimony supplied by the former security officer, it is not clear whether Katsav actually used the listening device to listen in on the workers, but it is clear that it was attached to his telephone and that it was put in place during his term in office. Tue, 17 Oct 2006 15:57:55 +0200 Saturday, October 21st, 2006 is an international day of awareness and remembrance for victims of electronic harassment and cause-stalking. At 11 a.m. EST/8 a.m. PST there will be an international conference call that will include victims from all over the world, including Dr Nick Begich, biophysicist Robert Duncan PhD and noted author Gloria Naylor (“The Women of Brewster Place” and “1996”). Tue, 17 Oct 2006 15:34:18 +0200 Participate Now & Receive Your FREE*OrbitorTM Electronic Listening Device *This promotion is conducted exclusively by Computer-Offer and is subject to participation terms and conditions. Receipt of your item requires compliance with offer terms, including: age and residency requirements; registration with valid email address, shipping address and contact phone number; completion of user survey and sponsor promotions. Upon valid completion of all Program Requirements. We will ship your item to your provided shipping address. Unless otherwise indicated, participation eligibility is restricted to US residents, 18 and over. Void where prohibited. Mon, 16 Oct 2006 16:55:38 +0200 Police say there's also basis for charges of fraud and malfeasance in office in the case of pardons granted by the president, as well as illegal wiretapping.
Sun, 15 Oct 2006 23:57:29 +0200 Here are some programs that can help. All are for Windows PCs; because there are far fewer Apple computers, they are less likely to become spyware targets. (but, mainly because Mac OSX is a higher-security operating system.)...
Sun, 15 Oct 2006 23:54:18 +0200 Malaysia - Picture this. Your daughter returns home one day, proudly announcing that she wants to get married.
She tells you she has found the perfect guy who is reputedly of flawless character, hails from a respectable family, well-educated, has a good job and a healthy bank balance. A meeting is arranged with the young man, and he turns out to be just as she had described. Humble, respectful and charming to boot — he appears to be the perfect son-in-law candidate. So what’s your next step? Why, hire a private investigator to check up on him, of course! This is the latest trend to emerge among protective parents who fear that their prospective sons-in-law might actually be ‘faking his resume’. Sun, 15 Oct 2006 23:50:42 +0200 ...Creates Tricky Legal Issues
Nanny cams and spyware heat up divorce proceedings While marital spying could land a spouse in hot water, it's also putting attorneys in some sticky situations. Divorce lawyers say they are treading very carefully as to how they handle feuding spouses who spy on each other, noting that a growing number of clients are using controversial -- and sometimes illegal -- methods. Given the technological boom, they note, husbands and wives have taken spying to a new level, using gadgets like nanny cams and spyware. ... Divorce attorney Karin Duchin Haber, of Haber & Silver in Florham Park, N.J., who represented the husband, would not comment on the case. She did, however, note that she's "definitely" seen an increase in marital spying in recent years. A few years ago, Haber represented a man whose wife -- suspecting an affair -- bought him a $400 alarm clock as a gift with a hidden camera inside. The husband discovered the camera during divorce proceedings and successfully sued his wife on domestic violence charges. Sun, 15 Oct 2006 00:02:01 +0200 A hypothesis that Microsoft's Windows XP is a complex variation of a bugging device.
M$ Windows XP Professional Bugging Device? By Mark McCarron If you have ever wondered, if; 1. Microsoft, was secretly spying on end-user machines? 2. Big Brother deployment scenarios were real? 3. M$ Windows was a type of bugging device? Then this, is for you my friend, the 'Top-47 Windows bugging functions', and then some. There is also an appendix on forensic methodology and Magnetic Force Microscopy (MFM). Sat, 14 Oct 2006 23:57:08 +0200 Ireland - The humble mobile phone has stepped into the murky world of corporate espionage and phone tapping.
Tales of eavesdropping and voicemail manipulation have been hitting the headlines recently, and mobile phone users -- particularly those in business -- must begin to wonder just how secure is their mobile phone? One chief executive of a leading Irish and international blue chip company who didn't wish to be named told ENN "I just assume my mobile is monitored... whether my calls are being listened to at any given time or not I just don't know. But you have to assume they are, and so do many others I know." Fri, 13 Oct 2006 22:52:24 +0200 Closing arguments in the punishment phase of Myers' burglary and wiretapping case are scheduled for today. Charles Myers, 55, faces up to life in prison for sneaking under his latest ex-girlfriend's house last year and planting a device to record her phone conversations.
Fri, 13 Oct 2006 22:39:17 +0200 Swiss newspaper SonntagsZeitung , reports that the Department of the Environment, Transport, Energy and Communications (UVEK) hired ERA IT Solutions some time ago to come up with a program capable of infecting PCs and tapping conversations without the need to crack VoIP PC-to-PC encryption.
The program - which would have to find its way onto a target computer using some form of Trojan-like deception - would be able to record and save conversations, sending them to a remote server hidden inside normal network traffic. If the PC was turned off before transmission had been completed, the program is would resend missing parts after the machine was next powered up. (Leave it to them not to miss a tick.) Fri, 13 Oct 2006 22:03:38 +0200 Covert Internet MiniCams
Available. Inexpensive. Viewable anywhere, by anyone with an Internet connection. Transmission via Cat 5 telephone cable. "Looks like just another phone line to me, Clem." Know how to find them? Call us, we'll do it for you. One example...
Fri, 13 Oct 2006 17:45:24 +0200 Flint, MI - He called himself "Pastor Paul."
But Paul L. Gagnon will soon be called an inmate after pleading guilty Thursday to an eavesdropping charge for spying on a male roommate and the roommate's girlfriend. Gagnon, 51, of Flint, a former self-described youth pastor, also pleaded guilty to eight additional charges for using his computer to possess and manufacture child pornography pictures. "It was in everyone's best interest that this matter was resolved," said attorney Erwin F. Meiers III, who represents Gagnon. "There was a possibility other things could surface that would have led to him being charged with life offenses." Mon, 09 Oct 2006 18:45:43 +0200 A few months ago, Werner Seifert moved to Ireland to concentrate on his jazz playing — and also to avoid tax on his €12m (£8m) pay-off.
He left behind his other big treasure: a vast apartment in Frankfurt with views over the river. In the meantime, another banker from a rival firm has moved in to house-sit — and discovered some peculiar additional fixtures. A complex system of listening devices is hidden in the ceilings and walls — even in the bathrooms. The discovery has surprised Seifert as much as the banker. Now I’m told an investigation is under way to find out who put them there, what they heard — and whether they may have profited. A former colleague said: “Seifert often did business from his flat, so it would be an obvious target.” Mon, 09 Oct 2006 13:54:04 +0200 1941 - Your telephone conversation can be made inaudible to others in the same room if the phone is equipped with a new mouthpiece that prevents sound from escaping. It is easily attached to any hand instrument and fits snugly around the speaker’s lips. There is no distortion of the voice. Part of the midget “telephone booth” telescopes to fit the standard cradle phone.
Sun, 08 Oct 2006 16:26:02 +0200 Telcos To Market Private Conversations As Reality Radio
San Antonio, Texas - A consortium of telecommunications companies led by AT&T, Verizon, and BellSouth today announced that they were combining resources to produce a new nationwide reality radio program based on the unauthorized private telephone conversations of their customers. Representatives of the consortium pointed out that this information had originally been gathered to assist the Bush administration and the NSA in its covert project to spy on ordinary Americans and that the companies involved felt that it presented a spectacular business opportunity that opened up a completely new revenue stream. Acknowledging that this type of information had previously been considered private and off-limits, Bill M. Moore, a spokesperson for the consortium said "Hey, that's before we got the green light from Bush, Cheney and Gonzales. Anyway, this stuff is too good not to use. I mean, we're talking family arguments, gossip, backstabbing, phone sex, medical information. The deepest darkest secrets people confide to their closest friends and family. Hell, it's pure gold. How could we not use it?" Laughing, he continued "besides, what are our customers going to do, sue us?" The name of the new reality radio program is "Privacy, Smivacy! We Know Your Secrets and Now Everybody Else Does Too." --- "I signed up for a new calling plan today -- the 'NSA Friends and Family' plan. For $100 a month, they listen to all my friends and all my family." --Jay Leno "If the government has been monitoring my phone conversations, by God, they should be paying half of my phone sex bill." --David Letterman "Bush's approval rating has fallen into the 20s -- 29 percent in the latest poll. I tell you. It's hard out there for a chimp. ... He says he doesn't pay attention to the polls. If he wants to know what the American people are thinking, he'll listen to your calls." --Bill Maher "I got a call last night during dinner from Verizon asking me if I was happy with my long distance surveillance." --Bill Maher "In the wake of news that the NSA is monitoring American phone records, Sen. Arlen Specter, the judiciary committee chairman, said he would subpoena the phone companies to appear before his committee. The phone companies said they would try to be there sometime between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m." --Tina Fey "Instead of the NSA recording conversations, this time they just gathered information about the calls: the time, the length and the phone numbers. In other words, while the government does know you called The Gay Teen Bondage Chatline at 1:45 a.m. for 7 minutes at a time, what you discussed... that's your business." --Jon Stewart Fri, 06 Oct 2006 16:16:45 +0200 The humble mobile phone has stepped into the murky world of corporate espionage and phone tapping Tales of eavesdropping and voicemail manipulation have been hitting the headlines recently, and mobile phone users -- particularly those in business -- must begin to wonder just how secure is their mobile phone? One chief executive of a leading Irish and international blue chip company who didn't wish to be named told ENN "I just assume my mobile is monitored... whether my calls are being listened to at any given time or not I just don't know. But you have to assume they are, and so do many others I know." Th |