Friday, March 6, 2009

Security Director Budget Booster - Proof a Counterespionage Budget increase is logical

excerpt from an excellent article by Burton and Stewart at stratfor.com...
...And one of the first functions cut during tough times often is corporate security...


Espionage is always a problem corporations must face. Competitors, criminals and even foreign governments often seek ways to gather proprietary information from companies, sometimes to boost their own operational capacities (e.g., to apply critical or emerging technologies to their weapons programs) and sometimes to sell on the open market...

When open source collection efforts fail, more invasive measures must be employed. Sometimes the required information can be obtained via technical surveillance. A faulty information technology system, for example, can expose the company's secrets via remote electronic intrusion conducted from a continent away. Other times, information can be obtained by eavesdropping on telephone calls made by corporate leaders or by using other technical surveillance measures...

With many corporate security departments being cut to the bone, many internal security services focused on the counterterrorism mission and many law enforcement agencies chasing white-collar criminals, it is a good time to be in the intelligence business.

One day we will look back on this time through a counterintelligence lens and see that, although it was a time of bear stock markets, it was a tremendous bull market for practitioners of human intelligence. (
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Top Spy Stories of the Week

• Ugandan Government admits to illegal tapping (more)
• Turkish Government admits to illegal wiretaps (more)
• Singer Gloria Estefan says CIA tried to recruit her as a spy (
more)
• Guyana - Roger Kahns' Spy Equipment Seized (more)
UK Firms paid for spy files on workers (more)
Finland Agrees To Let Companies Spy On Workers (more)
Despite official ban, spyware is hot seller in China (more)
Obama's Secret Letter to Russia Leaked (more)
Obama's Secret Helicopter Blueprints Leaked (more)
Demand for Predator spy planes continues (more)

Bell a phoney? Espionage or not? You decide...

Seth Shulman writes...
"My latest book, The Telephone Gambit: Chasing Alexander Graham Bell's Secret, is a nonfiction detective story. It recounts my experience, while working for a year as a science writing fellow at MIT, of stumbling upon a twisted mystery surrounding Bell's role in the invention of the telephone. Working from Bell's laboratory notebooks and his voluminous correspondence, I fell through a kind of historical trap door to becoming increasingly intrigued by the surprising story behind the invention of the telephone: a tale of romance, corruption, and unchecked ambition.

In the book, I try to capture the feel of the rich and exciting time in which Bell lived, as well as to tell my own story of chasing down clues about Bell’s life and times in rare archives and artifact collections around the world to unravel the surprising and long-hidden truth about him.

In the course of my research, I unearth a “smoking gun” that leaves little doubt that Bell furtively—and illegally—plagiarized his initial telephone design from his major competitor, Elisha Gray in his quest to secure what would become the most valuable U.S. patent ever issued. Afterwards, as Bell’s device led to the world’s largest monopoly, the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, I trace how he hid his invention’s illicit beginnings." (more)

Note: Bevis's great grandfather was not the model.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Teeny Tiny SpyCams








via the manufacturer...
"The smallest camera in the world."
1/18" Color CMOS Camera Pixel: 320 x 240 (NTSC) 240 TV Lines 2 Lux / F1.2 DC 3.3 V Dimension: 3.9 x 19 (mm) LENS: 0.96mm/F3.0 (55 Degree) Stock #: MO-R833-55 (more)

Why do we mention it?
So you know what you're up against.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Analog Cordless Phones - "Throw the bums out!"

"I do all my banking on the phone. A friend told me my cordless phone was a security risk because I have had it for quite a few years. Is she right?" T.Y., Durham

Simon Moon from This is Money replies: I put your question to First Direct, which has 1.2m customers who run their accounts by phone or online.

It pointed to a possible risk from using a non-digital cordless phone when speaking to your bank.

First Direct said: ...'In addition to ensuring that nobody nearby is listening in, customers should be aware that older generations of cordless telephones (so-called analogue cordless) are potentially susceptible to eavesdropping by someone with an appropriate receiver.

'The majority of home cordless phones sold over the past few years are digital and are far less vulnerable to eavesdropping than the older type.' (more)

Cordless Telephone Security 101
Some people are still unaware it is fairly easy to eavesdrop on the older cordless phones. Amazing. Even more amazing, however, is that conversations made with some of the new 2.4 GHz and 5.8 GHz are just as easy to intercept! These phones may say "digital" but the wireless portion of the voice channel is still FM analog transmission.

How can you tell the difference without hiring us?
Easy. Simply make a call and walk away from the base part of the phone. If you start to hear static and fading, one or both parts of the transmission path is using FM analogue modulation; an eavesdroppers delight. If your call suddenly ends, it is most likely digital modulation.

Your call ends abruptly. Are you safe? Not yet. Digital transmission is eavesdropper-resistant, not eavesdropper-proof.

Phones using the
Digital Enhanced Cordless Telecommunications (DECT), for example, use digital encryption... which can now be hacked.

Cordless phones which use
Digital Spread Spectrum (DSS) modulation are very secure if the circuit was designed properly. Unfortunately, we have found a few DSS models where the manufacturer economized to the point of making the circuit unbalanced, thus making interception possible again. Most DSS cordless phones, however, provide an adequate level of security for the average user.

Still concerned?
Want to know for certain if your cordless phone is a leaker?
Have it tested.

Murray Associates has a flat fee ($99.00) evaluation program.
Your phone, cordless or hardwired (no cellular at this time), is inspected by a Murray Associates certified technical investigator, using over $120,000.00 of lab instrumentation.

Inspection Protocol:
• Open, and examine phone for bugging devices and tampering.

• Reassemble phone and discretely seal it with serial numbered security tape. This is done to detect and deter future tampering.
• Electronically test the phone using a professional telecommunications analyzer (instrument and test details here)
• Cordless phone wireless transmissions are viewed and analyzed using a Real-Time Spectrum Analyzer (instrument details here).
• Corded phones are also checked for unintended emissions.


Phones are returned with a written report, and an eavesdropping vulnerability rating. Reports detail vulnerabilities discovered and make recommendations for improving security. Turnaround time is typically one week or less. Contact Murray Associates for further details.

Corporate clients have been using this inspection service for years. They send in brand new phones for inspection and sealing, then keep them on-the-shelf as instant replacements in environments we previously secured for them!

Surveillance Court Quietly Moving

First, the workers encased the room in reinforced concrete. Then came the thick wood-and-metal doors that seal into the walls. Behind those walls they labored in secret for two years, building a courtroom, judge's chambers and clerk's offices. The only sign that they were done came recently, when biometric hand scanners and green "Restricted Access" placards were placed at the entrances.

What workers have finally completed -- or perhaps not; few really know, and none would say -- is the nation's most secure courtroom for its most secretive court. (more)

Monday, March 2, 2009

Wife Uses Wiretap to Hit Husband's Pocketbook

NM - A former Hobbs assistant junior high principal has lost an appeal of his lawsuit against the school board and others. David Castillo sued after he wasn't offered a contract for the 2004-2005 school year. He alleges the action came after his estranged wife turned over a tape which the court describes as a graphically sexual telephone conversation between him and a secretary. (more)

"There oughta be a law!"

Uganda - The government has been tapping private telephone conversations illegally, the Minister for Security, Mr Amama Mbabazi, admitted before Parliament yesterday.

Mr Mbabazi becomes the first top government official at his level to admit eavesdropping on conversations and other communication of private citizens, though the practice mainly by security agencies, has for long been known to exist.

Mr Mbabazi made the admission as he appeared before Parliament’s Information, and Communication Technology Committee to defend a draft Bill that seeks to legalise tapping private communication. (more)

Sunday, March 1, 2009

SpyCam Story #520 - The Commish goes to Court

PA - A former central Pennsylvania officeholder will face trial on charges he secretly videotaped men having sex in his home. Prosecutors say ex-Cumberland County Commissioner Bruce Barclay used hidden cameras to make 176 recordings of 13 different men... Barclay is also charged with unlawfully using a computer and wiretapping. (more) (background)

Here's a plasma TV deal so hot, it's crepitus!

Scotland - Undercover cops smashed a suspected Scots drug gang - after selling the ringleaders bugged plasma screen TVs.

Drug barons were amazed by the amount of information the arresting officers seemed to have. They were then given the shock news that they had been secretly taped for months.


One police source said last night: "We knew everything they were up to. We even know how loud they fart."

The source added: "When the cops came to arrest one of the suspects, he asked them how they knew so much. The cop told them they'd been getting bugged through the telly. The TVs were top-of-the-range stuff but nobody suspected."

The news has spread like wildfire through the areas where the gang operated. (
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Hey! Mukker! Back to school with you...
Rule #1: Shut ye mooth. Gud technique. Coulda used it for'er. But noooo... ya bragged lika bagpipe.

Nest for Spies Revived

A 125-year-old London hotel, which was used as a temporary base by the British secret service during World War I, has reopened after a £16m revamp. The Royal Horseguards Hotel is connected to Whitehall by underground passages used during the war. Guests will now be offered guided tours of the building to learn about its secret past. Also featured in the 1983 Bond film Octopussy, it now forms part of the Guoman Hotels chain. (more)

Florida - Land of Love - Husband Turns in Wife

FL - A Panama City woman learned that recording phone calls is illegal when her soon to be ex-husband turned her into the Bay County Sheriff’s Office. The couple are going through a divorce and she recorded several of his phone calls without his knowledge in hopes of using them during the proceedings, deputies wrote in an incident report. But when he learned of the recordings he told his lawyer who told him to sign a complaint against his wife. She was arrested and charged with eavesdropping (illegal interception of communications.) (source)

Friday, February 27, 2009

Florida - Land of Love - Wife Turns in Husband

FL - Detectives on Wednesday arrested a 55-year-old Jacksonville Beach man they said hid a camera in a bathroom to record video of a girl while she was naked.

According to police, John Thomas Boyd Jr. put a "nanny cam" in the bathroom of a house to film a nude juvenile. Investigators said more than 60 video clips were found on Boyd's home computer.

Boyd's wife found the video clips and contacted the Jacksonville Beach Police Department. (more)

Bugging & Wiretapping - Arizonia Law

Bugging and Recording Conversations in Arizona: Is it Legal?
Lawyers often receive inquiries about the legalities of recording phone or other conversations in Arizona. In particular, the issue frequently arises in family law cases where child custody is at issue. Related to the recording issue is the “bugging” issue.

There are a number of variables that affect the answer to the central question, whether it is legal to either record or even bug conversations. First, bugging and recording are two different issues under Arizona law, often related, but also potentially very different under the law. Second, the laws regarding bugging and recording vary significantly by jurisdiction so what is legal in one state may be illegal in another. As well, the federal law may vary from state laws.

The following is a very brief analysis of the bugging and recording law in Arizona... (more)

The Core Sweep Offer

A Quarterly Boardroom / Top Executive
Eavesdropping Detection Audit
The basic minimum for corporate security programs.

• Full Inspection - 4 times per year.
• Boardroom, A/V area and three executive offices.
(Additional areas may be added very economically.)
Free – Wi-Fi Security & Compliance Audit included.
Bonus – Radio-frequency test covers a much larger area at no extra charge.

"When was the last time we inspected for bugs and wiretaps?"
If you do not remember, it is time to call Murray Associates.
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