Thursday, March 10, 2011

Yet Another Celebrity Open Mike Faux Pas

(yawn) Charlie Sheen, again...
15 minutes before Tuesday's Sheen's Korner, the audio feed came on. It sounded like static at first -- but you can clearly hear Sheen rehearsing with his crew and Teleprompter. Near the end you'll also hear some last-minute editing as he decides how to skewer producer Chuck Lorre without sounding anti-Semitic. (more)

The point...
Always assume the mike is on. 

One of the worst cases I witnessed was a corporate executive waiting to take the stage. He was wearing a wireless microphone and headed to the bathroom where he met another executive. Neither realized the mike was transmitting to the control booth; it was just not being pumped to the auditorium speakers yet. Some important guests in the control booth area heard every word. The conversation (not to mention the bodily noises) led to a very embarrassing public apology made during the man's speech.

(Updates) SpyCam Man and the Expensive Teddy Bear

Two neighboring states.
Two children involved.
Two types of justice.
Fair and equal?
You decide...

KS - A Saline County man was sentenced to probation Tuesday, after admitting he used hidden cameras to secretly videotape family members. The sentence was on charges of sexual exploitation of a child and eavesdropping... The man lived at the home with his wife, stepdaughter and step-granddaughter, said his attorney. (more)
Probation?!?!

NE - Digital recording tools are so cheap and simple to use that it's easy to deploy them without thinking through the consequences. A Nebraska mother and grandfather found this out the hard way last month when they were hit with a combined $120,000 penalty for wiretapping after sticking an audio recorder inside a young girl's favorite teddy bear.

Though the mother claimed only to be concerned with her child's welfare, the judge found that the indiscriminate use of the recording device had violated the privacy of numerous people, each of whom were entitled to $10,000. (more)

China to Track 17 Million Cellphone Users

China said it may begin tracking cellphone users in Beijing through location technology it hopes will help city authorities better manage traffic. But the announcement also sparked fresh concerns that the government may be using mobile technology to surveil its residents.

In an announcement, made through Beijing's Municipal People's Government Web site, the Chinese government said it would track 17 million cellphone users in Beijing through location technology to "publish real-time dynamic information to ease congestion and improve the efficiency of public travel."

Beijing is notorious for its traffic congestion. Last August, a 60-mile jam into the capital city lasted nine days. (more)

P.S. You can see a similar use of tracking technology; it's used on Google Maps (click on the traffic view). (How it works.)

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Meanwhile, outside the Tap Cave...

Turkey - A plan to install flood-prevention sensors in southeastern Turkey has prompted a panic among local residents, who became convinced that the devices in street lamps and on roofs would actually wiretap the entire city.

Speculation about the devices began to circulate in Batman province... Amid rising paranoia in Turkey, the gossip mill in Batman quickly turned the story into a more sinister one. The rumor that the city’s street lamps and roofs were full of wiretapping gadgets listening in on all of its residents’ conversations was picked up by TV stations and online news sites, creating a furor. (more)

In past news...
The mayor of an oil-producing city in southeastern Turkey, which has the same name as the Caped Crusader, is suing helmer Christopher Nolan and Warner Bros. for royalties from mega-grosser "The Dark Knight."


Huseyin Kalkan, the pro-Kurdish Democratic Society Party mayor of Batman, has accused "The Dark Knight" producers of using the city's name without permission.

"There is only one Batman in the world," Kalkan said. "The American producers used the name of our city without informing us." (more)

Old West Security Sensibility - "Drop it, pard'ner."

Wells Fargo's IT group has a simple answer for employees who want to hook personal devices up to corporate systems: No.

"They can't connect them to our networks," says Wayne Mekjian, executive vice president and CIO of information services at Wells Fargo. "We won't let them in."

The "just say no" policy applies to Apple iPads, Android tablets and smartphones owned by employees. The company also has strict policies regarding use of Twitter and Facebook, making the sites off-limits to many. Wells Fargo does, however, supply employees with corporate-approved smartphones, and a limited deployment of iPads that can connect to e-mail and other corporate systems. (more)

Le Oops - Renault plans to exonerate managers fired for alleged corporate espionage

Carlos Ghosn
France - Renault SA is making plans to exonerate the three managers fired for alleged corporate espionage, people familiar with the matter said, in what would be a major stand-down that could presage a change in the French auto maker’s senior management.

As Renault faces up to what is likely to be an embarrassing conclusion to its highly touted "affaire d’espionnage," one scenario being discussed by the firm’s board is for Chief Operating Officer Patrick PĂ©lata to tender his resignation, the people familiar with the matter said. It is unclear whether Chief Executive Carlos Ghosn would accept the resignation, however, these people added. (more)

(Update) SpyCam Story #603 - All Things Not Considered

Vivian Schiller, the embattled chief executive of NPR, resigned from the organization Wednesday, one day after an embarrassing video surfaced of another NPR executive disparaging conservatives.  

The sudden announcement came after officials from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and members of NPR's board conferred last night about the fallout from the revelation on Tuesday of a surreptitiously recorded video of NPR Foundation president Ron Schiller (no relation to Vivian Schiller). The video, made by conservative activist James O'Keefe, shows Ron Schiller calling Republicans and members of the tea party movement "xenophobic" and "racist" and saying that NPR would prefer to do without subsidies provided by the federal government. (more) (video)


Point: Be careful, you can never tell when you'll be recorded.

Counterpoint: In less than 24-hours, the spy shop spammers on capitalizing on news.
"Welcome to our newsletter!
Our hidden Cameras are used all over the place.
Read the entire article here:
NPR CEO RESIGNS.
 
To make your own covert recording, buy our hidden video cameras from one of our Delaers here. To become a Dealer just visit www.minigadgets.com and fill in our Dealer profile page."

Security Director Alert: GPS Jammers - The Next Big Threat?

click to enlarge
click to enlarge
Security Directors: Give some thought to how GPS is used in your company. Create a plan for when it dies. ~Kevin

Important...
Signals from GPS satellites now help you to call your mother, power your home, and even land your plane – but a cheap plastic box can jam it all... (more) (How GPS works.)

GPS jammers...
One manufacturer claims production of 50,000 units per year. Cheap. (ebay)

FutureWatch...
Although the GPS disruption threat is not new, we are reaching critical mass - product-wise and incentive-wise. The next terrorist, activist, protester, prankster threat - salt an area (like an airport) with hundreds of these. It will take a while to find them all. Have a security plan ready. Idea: Install a GPS frequency monitor alarm in mission critical areas. (advice from Los Alamos National Laboratory) (more)

The Ray Gun is Back...

...and you're going to need more than a tin foil hat this time.

The ray gun has become more than a boyhood fantasy. The Army is quietly working to develop technology with the potential to arm tomorrow's armored combat vehicles with the capability to destroy electronic systems with high-intensity bursts of RF energy. (video)

FutureWatch - Be sure to watch the video. This development is way more important than it first appears. ~Kevin

Saturday, March 5, 2011

Like Watching a Train Wreck




Australia - Queensland Rail has released dramatic CCTV footage of people narrowly escaping oncoming trains as part of a new safety campaign. (video)

Bad ass public safety or Jackass via public CCTV? My Australian colleague thinks it might inspire both. He might be right. Let's see what happens if the concept comes to America. 

Wait... 
Remember Signal-30!?!?

U.S. Supreme Court - "No" to Corporate Personal Privacy

The U.S. Supreme Court rejected the concept of corporate personal privacy in its decision today in FCC v. AT&T, Inc. AT&T sued to keep records withheld from disclosure under Exemption 7(c) of the Freedom of Information Act, which protects against the unwarranted invasion of personal privacy. AT&T claimed personal privacy protections extend to corporations. In a unanimous decision, the court held that Exemption 7(c) applied to individuals only. (more)

Friday, March 4, 2011

China Helps Build Intelligence Complex for Mugabe

Zimbabwe - Construction of the government’s secret electronic eavesdropping complex just outside Harare is moving at a ‘very fast pace’ SW Radio Africa learned on Thursday.

It’s believed the complex will, amongst many other things, be used to monitor internet use and telephone calls in Zimbabwe. The ‘snooping’ project, according to a source, is to become the government agency that monitors communications around the whole country. (more)

Considering these folks don't even have their own currency anymore, who's paying for this? Why?

Play "Connect the Dots"
Zimbabwe natural resources: Deposits of more than 40 minerals including diamonds, ferrochrome, gold, silver, platinum, copper, asbestos, nickel, graphite, coal, lithium, palladium, vermiculite; 19 million hectares of forest (more) (sing-a-long)

"It all happened after the new Donutland opened."

A random inspection of the electronic surveillance system of the Mumbai police on Wednesday, found that the Global Positioning System (GPS) in as many as 30 vehicles were malfunctioning, or not functioning at all. The faux pas came to the notice of the newly appointed police commissioner Arup Patnaik, who was inspecting the police control room to oversee the working condition as well functioning of the men and the machines deployed therein.

“I was told technical faults in the equipment led to malfunctioning of the GPS system,” Patnaik said. (more)

In other news...
CT - Police in Cheshire said a car crashed into the front of a Dunkin' Donuts on West Main Street on Thursday afternoon. There was no word if anyone was injured in the crash. No other information was available. (more)  Imagine that!

Judith Coplon - Dead at 89

Judith Coplon, a former Justice Department employee who became a sensation in 1949 when she was accused of being a Soviet spy, has died. She was 89.

Coplon, who in later years went by her married name, Judith Socolov, died Saturday in a New York City hospital, said her daughter, Emily Socolov.

As a 28-year-old Justice Department employee, Coplon was caught with secret U.S. documents at a meeting with a Russian agent on a Manhattan street. She claimed she was meeting him only because she loved him, but she was found guilty at two trials.

The convictions were overturned, and the cases were eventually dropped. (more)

"What will Anna Chapman do next?"

Russian spy Anna Chapman is in from the cold and out on the Internet with an official website featuring photos, news and an upbeat message urging Russians to smile and be self-reliant.

The site www.annachapman.ru is the latest venture from Chapman, who has made a media splash since her deportation from the United States in a Cold War-style spy swap last July. (more)

She would have loved Ed Wood.