Friday, February 10, 2012

Today in Spy History - 50 Years Ago - Francis Gary Powers

On a bridge outside Berlin one gloomy morning 50 years ago Friday stood Francis Gary Powers, the pilot of a CIA spy plane that was shot down over the Russian Ural mountains. He had waited 21 months for this moment. He had survived a plane crash, weeks of harsh interrogation and the brutal conditions of a Soviet prison. He was on the threshold of freedom, and his heart was thumping heavily.

On the opposite end of the steel-trussed Glienecke Bridge was Col. Rudolph Abel, the highest-ranking Russian intelligence officer to be caught spying in the United States.

At 8:52 a.m., the two men began walking forward. They passed each other and made eye contact. Neither said a word.

It was a dramatic — and surprisingly peaceful — end to a political crisis at a time of extreme tensions between the United States and the Soviet Union. (more)

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Government Security Conference and Expo - April 2-4

GovSec returns to Washington, DC for its 11th year with a Conference and a free* admission Expo!

This year the Government Security Conference and Expo, is joining forces with the Contingency Planning & Management, Network-Centric Security, and U.S. Law Enforcement Conferences. By combining these events attendees can make integrated buying decisions at one event.

Topics include:
*Critical Infrastructure Protection
*Counter Terrorism: Domestic & International
*Cyber Terrorism and Cybercrime
*Contingency Planning & Management
*Network-Centric Security

Expo includes:
*Agency Briefings
*Mobile Apps Experience
*Keynote Presentations
*Security Clearance Mini Workshop
*CISSP Exam Prep Clinic
*Force & Firearms Championship
*K-9 Explosive Detection Team Demo
*Bomb Squad Response and Robots Demo
*2011 Espionage Debrief
....and much more!

Opening Keynotes

Ralph S. Boelter, Assistant Director, FBI Counterterrorism Division
Gordon M. Snow, Assistant Director, FBI Cyber Division.

Wednesday Keynote
Senator George J. Mitchell, Former U.S. Special Envoy for Middle East Peace.
 
*$50 fee for non-government attendees registering after February 27.

Wiretapping, Murder and a $30 Million Lottery Jackpot = A Shakespearean Tragedy

FL - A judge this morning rescheduled the trial for Dorice Donegan "Dee Dee" Moore, who is charged in the death of lottery winner Abraham Shakespeare.

Moore is charged with first-degree murder and illegal wiretapping in the slaying of Shakespeare, a Lakeland man who won a $30 million lottery jackpot in November 2006. (more)

Baltasar the Judge... Hear Here

Spain's Supreme Court has found the country's best-known judge, Baltasar Garzon, guilty of authorising illegal recordings of lawyers' conversations.

He has been banned from the legal profession for 11 years. The court said he could not appeal aginst the ruling. (more)

SpyCam Story #648 - Today in Video Voyeurism

Russia - A 71-year-old Moscow man has been charged with two felony counts of video voyeurism stemming from a police investigation that determined he allegedly secretly videotaped sexual encounters with a former girlfriend and then left graphic print-out images from those videos in her current boyfriend's vehicle. (more)

DC - In the last decade of the 1800s, a new word appeared in the lexicon: voyeurism. It was first used to describe a service offered at certain Paris brothels equipped with a peephole cut in a bedroom wall, but it might just as easily been invented to described the awesome new power of the first portable Kodak cameras that appeared on the market at the same time. Sepia-toned images from those early Instamatics are part of a fascinating new exhibition at the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., titled "Snapshots: Painters and Photography, Bonnard to Vuillard." Some of the most famous Post-Impressionists painters were also Kodak fans, and pointed the lens at the same subjects that fill their paintings—their wives, mistresses, and female models. "Snapshots: Painters and Photography, Bonnard to Vuillard" is on view at the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C., until May 6. (more)

UK - A man has appeared before Carlisle magistrates to face two charges of voyeurism by recording “a private act” and two counts of sexual assault. (more)

FL - A Marion County Sheriff's Office corrections officer placed on unpaid leave after being arrested on charges of video voyeurism and unlawful use of a computer has resigned. (more)

AZ - Owen Dix pled guilty Feb. 6 to one count of photographing someone without their consent and one count of videotaping someone without their consent. He will be sentenced on March 12, 2012. Owen Dix, 35, took pictures of a child inside the boy's bathroom at Banks Elementary School on Dec. 12, 2011. (more)

Business Espionage: DuPont & Dow & Motorola v. China

US authorities Wednesday unveiled charges against five people and five companies in an espionage scheme aimed at stealing trade secrets for Chinese-controlled firms from US chemical giant DuPont. 

A grand jury indictment unsealed in San Francisco contains charges in a "long-running effort to obtain US trade secrets for the benefit of companies controlled by the government of the People's Republic of China," the Justice Department said...

In a separate industrial espionage case, a Chinese scientist was sentenced in December to more than seven years in prison for stealing secrets on organic insecticides from Dow AgroSciences, where he worked from 2003-2008. (more)

Separately, a former engineer for Motorola Inc was found guilty on Wednesday of stealing trade secrets from the company but cleared of economic espionage for China. (more)

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

P.D. Drone Home

FutureWatch
Look! Up in the sky! Is it a bird? Is it a plane? It’s … a drone, and it’s watching you. That’s what privacy advocates fear from a bill Congress passed this week to make it easier for the government to fly unmanned spy planes in U.S. airspace. 

The FAA Reauthorization Act, which President Obama is expected to sign, also orders the Federal Aviation Administration to develop regulations for the testing and licensing of commercial drones by 2015.

Privacy advocates say the measure will lead to widespread use of drones for electronic surveillance by police agencies across the country and eventually by private companies as well. (more)

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Today in Eavesdropping News

PA - Three members of one family have pleaded guilty to charges stemming from the concealing of a digital recorder inside the home of another relative because they did not believe his alibi for the night a Buffalo Township woman was murdered.

Douglas Edward Louk, 43, and his wife, Kristen Louk, 29, both of 1149 Robinson Highway, Robinson Township, and Loretta Holland, 45, and Robert E. Boyd, 39, both of 2995 Taft St., North Franklin Township, were charged by state police with wiretapping and criminal conspiracy. (more)

Philippines - Controversial Personality’s problems never end. After a series of unfortunate events, CP is in trouble again. According to online buzz, bosses are investigating employees’ complaints against CP. Coworkers suspect CP of bugging their cell phones using a certain computer software. Should Former Lover change phones and passwords now? CP, who’s been rebuffed by the public for such shenanigans, just never learns. (more)

SpyCam Story #648 - Today in Video Voyeurism

MA - A 24-year-old Somerville man has been indicted on charges alleging that he took video of women inside a YMCA locker room without their knowledge, according to Middlesex District Attorney Gerry Leone. (more)

WA - King County prosecutors charged a 48-year-old Renton man Feb. 2 with voyeurism after he allegedly took photographs inside of the women's locker room at the Tukwila LA Fitness, 350 Baker Blvd. (more)

UK - At Carlisle Crown Court, Gary Flanagan, 26, admitted a single allegation of voyeurism – by using his mobile phone to take an indecent photograph in a toilet and 23 child pornography offences. (more)

Illinois Tries to Untangle Their Wiretap Law

IL - "We specifically applaud state Rep. Elaine Nekritz, D-Des Plaines, for proposing legislation that would remove from the eavesdropping law instances in which the recording of an individual without their knowledge or consent is a felony.

Specifically, House Bill 3944 would exempt from an eavesdropping violation the recording of a peace officer who is performing a public duty in a public place and speaking at a volume audible to the unassisted human ear.

The legislation also would permit a nonemployee to record a conversation if a corporation or other business entity announces it may record or listen to a telephone conversation with a nonemployee. Both are situations that members of the general public encounter every day." (more)

Silvio Berlusconi Wrapped up in Wiretaps Again

Italy - Former Italian PM Silvio Berlusconi is facing a fresh trial on charges of revealing a secret wiretap in 2005. This will bring to four the number of current trials in which Mr Berlusconi is the main defendant. (more)

SpyCam Story #647 - Unintended Exhibitionists

Feeds from thousands of Trendnet home security cameras have been breached, allowing any web user to access live footage without needing a password.

Internet addresses which link to the video streams have been posted to a variety of popular messageboard sites. Users have expressed concern after finding they could view children's bedrooms among other locations.

Oops...
Click to enlarge.
US-based Trendnet says it is in the process of releasing updates to correct a coding error introduced in 2010...
 
"We first became aware of this on 12 January," said Zak Wood, Trendnet's director of global marketing.

"As of this week we have identified 26 [vulnerable] models. Seven of the models - the firmware has been tested and released. We anticipate to have all of the revised firmware available this week. We are scrambling to discover how the code was introduced and at this point it seems like a coding oversight." (more) (example) 

Spybusters Security Alert: Check to see if you are operating any cameras made by Trendnet. If so, contact Trendnet for a firmware update. Then, change your password.

Monday, February 6, 2012

SpyCam Story #646 - Today in Video Voyeurism

VT - A Bellows Falls man is facing up to 15 years in prison for allegedly taking sexually explicit photographs and video footage of a woman and uploading them onto a pornographic website.

DOH!
John G. Lawlor, 38, pleaded not guilty last week to one felony and five misdemeanor counts of voyeurism. If convicted, he could also face up to a $10,000 fine.

Lawlor’s computer and a video camera were taken as evidence and contained seven digital videos, five of which had been previously deleted but were recovered using file recovery software... in at least four of the videos Lawlor’s face can be clearly seen hiding the video camera in a floor grate.  (more)

WA - The trial of a former Washington state hatchery manager charged with a single count of voyeurism has been pushed back two months.

Edwin Carl Jouper of Shelton had been scheduled to appear in court yesterday, Jan. 31, but according to Mason County Superior Court, he waived his right to a speedy trial. It's now scheduled for April 3.

Jouper, then 57, was arrested at the Department of Fish & Wildlife's George Adams Hatchery outside Shelton on Nov. 10 following an investigation into a camera discovered in the women's bathroom there. (more)

Satellite Phone Encryption Cracked

Security researchers have warned that the satellite phones relied on by businesses, charities and government agencies in trouble spots and emergencies worldwide can be easily intercepted and deciphered.

German academics said they had cracked two encryption systems used to protect satellite phone signals and that anyone with cheap computer equipment and radio could eavesdrop on calls over an entire continent. Hundreds of thousands of satellite phone users are thought to be affected.

“We were able to completely reverse engineer the encryption algorithms employed,” said Benedikt Driessen and Ralf Hund of Ruhr University Bochum as they announced their report, "Don't Trust Satellite Phones". (more)

Friday, February 3, 2012

Security Director Alert - Conference Call Eavesdropping

A conference call between Scotland Yard and the FBI has been intercepted and published by a member of the computer hacking group Anonymous.

The hacker apparently managed to access the call after getting into an FBI email which gave details of the call. The email was also posted online. (more)



Murray Associates advice:
Conferencing numbers and passwords are often posted on cubicle walls, sent via email and sometimes written underneath the table-top speakerphones themselves. This is a common, but dangerous, employee habit in many of the companies we visit. Conference call information should be held confidential and distributed on a need-to-know basis. To do otherwise, invites unauthorized call participants.

Teleconferencing Checklist
• Change all current passcodes.
• Tell employees they should not email or post the new passcodes.
• Switch to a conference call system where:
-- each participant is given a unique passcode,
-- the passcode is changed for each new conference call,
-- only the pre-authorized number of callers may be admitted,
-- and a record of all call participants is available to the call leader.

Think this is a rare problem?
Think again...

More Conference Call Intercepts & Advice
http://spybusters.blogspot.com/2011/06/beef-board-admits-ceo-eavesdropped-on.html