So Rachel Tobac of Social Proof Security gave the people what they want:
a TikTok-style sea shanty about infosec. more sing-a-long
Thursday, February 11, 2021
People need InfoSec tips. People want TikTok-style Sea Shanties...
Monday, February 1, 2021
Russian Hack Changes Court Rules on Handling Sensitive Information
Until recently, even the most secretive material — about wiretaps, witnesses and national security concerns – could be filed electronically. But that changed after the massive Russian hacking campaign that breached the U.S. court system’s electronic case files and those of scores of other federal agencies and private companies.
The new rules for filing sensitive documents are one of the clearest ways the hack has affected the court system. But the full impact remains unknown. Hackers probably gained access to the vast trove of confidential information hidden in sealed documents, including trade secrets, espionage targets, whistleblower reports and arrest warrants. It could take years to learn what information was obtained and what hackers are doing with it. more
And The Darwin Award for Spying Goes To...
The alleged peeper, identified as 41-year-old Brian Anthony Joe of Woodbridge, was charged after falling through a ceiling in the women's locker room at the gym and landing on a woman below. He was then cornered by patrons at the gym until law enforcement arrived. more
PI News: Famous Private Eye Jack Palladino Gravely Injured in Robbery / RIP
Palladino, 70, had just stepped outside his San Francisco home on Thursday to try out his new camera when a car pulled up and a man jumped out to grab it from him, police and the detective's stepson Nick Chapman told the San Francisco Chronicle.
As the suspect grabbed the camera, Palladino fell and hit his head on the pavement, causing a traumatic head injury. Chapman said Palladino was not expected to survive after undergoing surgery to stop the massive bleeding.
Palladino was wrapping up one final case before joining his wife and work partner, Sandra Sutherland, in retirement. more
UPDATE: Jack died February, 1 2021. more
Tuesday, January 26, 2021
Jackson County (AL) Conducts "Professional Search" for Surveillance Cameras
District 3 Commissioner AJ Buckner told News 19 that so far, they have found no evidence that any other cameras are where they should not be, but they would like to go through a security sweep process to be sure.
No word from officials on whether Tuesday’s sweep turned up any inappropriately placed surveillance cameras. The investigation by ALEA is ongoing. more
This is an uncommon case of smart due diligence. Congratulations JCCO. If you would like to learn how to perform your own search, click here.
Monday, January 25, 2021
Excellent Article: Last Call for Gumshoes
San Francisco is missing its private investigators.
This engaging article by Phil Bronstein explains...
Something’s gone missing from the shadowy streets of San Francisco, a precious, revealing relic already mostly vanished long before the thieving suction of COVID-19. A piece of it is still with us, though who knows whether even that will survive.
Few have noticed its disappearance, which is a tragedy because it is a deliciously naughty, rich vein of life; the city and its rough-edged, romantic culture will suffer without it.
So, what is this about? What happened? There are clues... more
One famous San Francisco treat missing from the article is Leo Jones. His company was named Fargo. His body wires were commonly referred to as Fargos by police, mostly west coast. Body wires on the east coast and federally were referred to as Kels. Leo was an originator of many items were mostly 39,xx mhz and other low bands. He also had a countermeasures gear company named Sabre.
Leo Jones: Pioneer in Electronic Surveillance
by Ralph Simpson, History San Jose, February 2012
Introduction
Leo Hugh Jones (8/17/1926 – 2/10/2002) was an early pioneer in the
development of electronic surveillance and countermeasures devices. In
1950, he founded a company called Fargo to design and manufacture these
high-tech specialty devices. Fargo was based in San Francisco and sold
its products exclusively to law enforcement organizations around the
world. more
Sad Update (1/30/21)...
Jack Palladino, the (San Francisco) private investigator who worked on high-profile
cases ranging from the Jonestown mass suicides to celebrity and
political scandals, has been placed on life support after suffering a
head injury during an attempted robbery.
Palladino, 70, had just stepped outside his San Francisco home on Thursday to try out his new camera when a car pulled up and a man jumped out to grab it from him, police and the detective's stepson Nick Chapman told the San Francisco Chronicle.
As the suspect grabbed the camera, Palladino fell and hit his head on the pavement, causing a traumatic head injury. Chapman said Palladino was not expected to survive after undergoing surgery to stop the massive bleeding.
Palladino was wrapping up one final case before joining his wife and work partner, Sandra Sutherland, in retirement. more
Saturday, January 23, 2021
Secret Recordings Reveal Sister's Sad Schadenfreude Shortcoming
via The New York Times...
My
sister revealed that she often records phone conversations that she has
with our father without his knowledge. She says she does it because he
is so “funny,” i.e., eccentric, but I get the impression that she is
laughing more at him than with him. I find his conversations less
humorous than distressing, since he is often, at the best of times, in a
state of heightened psychological dysregulation and anxiety, and the
pandemic has just made things worse. Because of my sister’s behavior, my
niece has grown up thinking there’s nothing wrong or unethical with
recording conversations without the other person’s knowledge or consent
and has herself started to do this.
|
When
I found out what my sister was doing, I was uneasy and told her that it
was illegal to record someone without their consent. Her rapid retort
was, “It’s not in New York,” where she lives, as if that made it OK. more |
Another TSCM Fail - Spycam in Girl's Changing Room - No Follow-Up
Here we go again and again. For the third time in two months a spy camera is discovered and the ball is dropped. In the last case—after assuring everyone they searched and the room was now safe—a second spycam was found two weeks later, in the same room!
In this case, the police declared, "There is no current evidence to suggest that other restrooms or private areas in the multi-tenant facility were compromised."
No mention of a competent Technical Surveillance Countermeasures (TSCM) sweep to back up this lame claim.
TN - An investigation into a camera set up in a girls' changing facility has revealed 60 victims as of Thursday afternoon, police in Tennessee said.
The GoPro camera — which was found hidden in a girls' changing and restroom at Premier Athletics which offers training in cheerleading, dance and gymnastics — was reviewed by police after it was found last week. Sixty females, mostly minors, were recorded on the camera, police said...
Working with facility management, detectives have identified 47 of the 60 victims and are in the process of notifying their parents. Detectives are working to identify the remaining 13 victims.The girls' changing and restroom at the center of this investigation is located inside the Premier Athletics suite. There is no current evidence to suggest that other restrooms or private areas in the multi-tenant facility were compromised, police said. more
A good investigator will tell you... "If you find one bug or spycam there is a possibility there are others. Keep searching."
A good attorney might tell Premier Athletics... "You now have foreseeability. Conduct and document regular inspections of your expectation-of-privacy areas.
Professional Recommendation — Premier Athletics, and similar businesses, need to create an in-house TSCM inspection program. It's cheap, it's easy, it's great for public relations, and it's especially good for staying out of court. Everything you need to know to get started is here.
Friday, January 22, 2021
Home Alarm Tech Backdoored Security Cameras to Spy on Customers
Telesforo Aviles, a 35-year-old former employee of home and small office security company ADT, said that over a five-year period, he accessed the cameras of roughly 200 customer accounts on more than 9,600 occasions—all without the permission or knowledge of customers. He said he took note of homes with women he found attractive and then viewed their cameras for sexual gratification. He said he watched nude women and couples as they had sex.
Aviles made the admissions Thursday in US District Court for the District of Northern Texas, where he pleaded guilty to one count of computer fraud and one count of invasive visual recording. He faces a maximum of five years in prison. more
Legislation Proposed in NY to Protect Owners from Eavesdropping Devices
New York Governor Andrew Cuomo is proposing ground-breaking legislation that would require companies that make “smart” devices like smart phones and televisions that can record, retain and transmit recordings to clearly display those capabilities to consumers.
The Democrat says the legislation is intended to make sure people know their smartphones, smart speakers and smart TVs that are connected to the internet can record what their owners are doing so they can manage their settings accordingly.
The Governor says everyone has heard stories about smart devices connected to the internet recording people without their knowledge. Cuomo says people should be better informed about those capabilities and not have to search for that information hidden in fine print.
The Governor’s announcement did not go into detail on how that information would be displayed and what penalties could be levied against companies that failed to clearly disclose recording capabilities. more
German Laptop Retailer Fined €10.4m for Video-Monitoring Employees
Data protection authority LfD Niedersachsen has fined Germany-based IT products supplier Notebooksbilliger.de AG €10.4 million ($12.6 million) for video monitoring its employees without any legal basis, ZD Net reported.
The video surveillance system was active at all times and
recordings were saved for as many as 60 days in the company's database,
breaching employees’ privacy rights under the 2018 General Data
Protection Regulation. more
Russia’s Overseas Spies Keep Getting Caught
Spy rings keep getting busted and a massive hack of U.S. government departments has been exposed, but Russia’s spooks keep blundering on...
Lithuania is the latest country to announce that it has busted a Russian spy ring on its soil. The allegation that two of its citizens were spying for Russia comes a few weeks after the Dutch authorities rolled up another of the Kremlin’s “substantial espionage networks.” It’s been a tumultuous few months for President Putin’s overseas espionage operation, which keeps getting caught in the act.It is unclear if a string of recent arrests blowing
up Russia’s overseas missions is merely a coincidence, or whether there
has been some kind of leak from inside Russia’s notorious intel
agencies. “There is some penetration,” Andrei Soldatov, one of Russia’s
best-informed trackers of the security agencies, told The Daily Beast.
“Whether it’s relatively new or old, I don't know, but it looks like a
big decision was made to use that penetration to slow down Russian
offensive ops.” more
Antonio ProhÃas - 100th Anniversary of his Birth
Antonio ProhÃas arrived in New York in May of 1960 with just $5 in his pocket, pressured to leave Cuba after Fidel Castro accused him of being a CIA agent.
It took a Cuban illustrator to really capture the essence of Cold War intelligence and counter-intelligence for the MAD-reading public. After penning one too many cartoons that were critical of Fidel Castro, ProhÃas — who was a prominent cartoonist and illustrator in his home country — headed for New York, writes Eric Grundhauser for Atlas Obscura. At the time, he didn’t speak a word of English.
“In New York, ProhÃas took work in a factory during the day, while working up his illustration portfolio at night,” Grundhauser writes. He changed the appearance of one of his characters from the strip he published in Cuba, El Hombre Siniestro, and gave him a counterpart: Spy vs. Spy was born.
“The sweetest revenge has been to turn Fidel’s accusation of me as a spy
into a moneymaking venture,” ProhÃas said in a 1983 interview with the
Miami Herald. “One of these days I am going to have to make a sign
saying, ‘Thank You, Fidel.’ ”
On the 100th anniversary of his birth last Sunday — the Cienfuegos native died in Miami in 1998 — ProhÃas is still spreading laughter with his Cold War spies,
who pummeled each other brutally with whatever sophisticated weapons
they could grab from the black humor bag of their creator. more & more
Inside Information... When Government and Business Clean House
Cleaning up the White House after Donald Trump and Melania Trump moved out cost taxpayers about $127,000. No, this doesn't include biohazard remediation, or surveillance bug sweeps. more
What security directors need to know about "The Other Covid Deep Clean."
Friday, January 8, 2021
Is This Mystery Unmanned Vessel Really A Chinese Spy?
On December 20, Indonesian fishermen netted an unusual catch – a torpedo-like submarine drone or unmanned underwater vehicle (UUV), still functioning with an indicator light blinking. They passed their find to Indonesian authorities. Military analysts have been quick to identify the craft as a Sea Wing or Haiyi, a Chinese-made UUV operated by China's navy. But it might not be so simple.
Most UUVs are bright yellow or orange to make them easier to retrieve; this one is dull grey, a strong indication that the operators did not want the vessel to be spotted. The fact that nobody has stopped forward to claim the device is a further indication it was on a covert mission.
In fact, the circumstances rather closely mirror the mystery unmanned vessel washed up in Scotland last year. However, this is a rather different and even more covert craft. more