On Wednesday, the German rail spying scandal went from run-of-the-mill to flabbergasting: 173,000 -- and not 1,000 -- employees were spied on. Politicians and the public are outraged, and commentators predict that the Deutsche Bahn CEO will take the fall. (more)
High anxiety about job-cuts in the workplace is fueling inter-office rumors, gossiping and eavesdropping, according to a recent survey by the Society for Human Resource Management.
Of 494 human-resource professionals surveyed, nearly 1/4 reported that they had encountered significantly more cases of eavesdropping in the workplace over the past year...
More than 1/5 of survey respondents reported that workers at their companies had recently been confronted or disciplined by an authority figure for spreading rumors or eavesdropping. (more)
The Opposition Pays ...in more ways than one.
Microsoft is suing a former employee for applying for his job under false pretenses and using his role at the company to gain access to confidential data related to patent litigation he is now waging, reports the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.Miki Mullor was hired by Microsoft in November 2005 after stating in his job application that he was a former employee at Ancora Technologies, a local software development company that he said had gone out of business.However, Microsoft claims Ancora was still a viable company and that Mullor was still its chief executive — and that while he was at Microsoft, he downloaded confidential documents to his company-issued laptop. (more)
Miki talks... "When I joined Microsoft, I notified them in writing of Ancora and my patent in both my resume and in my employment agreement. In its complaint against me, Microsoft withheld the portions of these key documents that show this." (more)
"The patent case is scheduled for trial in a Los Angeles federal court on Jan. 26, 2010." This is getting interesting, and EXPENSIVE. Let's meet back here in a year and see what happens.
Spybusters Tip # 493
Look for espionage problems pro-actively. Catch them early.
Result... Low cost. Higher success rate.
Need help? Call us.
Japan - The Communication Interception Law, which authorizes wiretapping as part of investigations, took effect in 2000. The Metropolitan Police Department carried out Japan's first wiretap authorized under the law in 2002.Police across Japan conducted authorized wiretaps in a record 11 cases in 2008, up four from the previous year, that lead to the arrest of 34 people, Justice Minister Eisuke Mori told a Cabinet meeting Friday.The number of arrests was the same as 2007... "Know-how on authorized wiretapping seems to be steadily taking hold," the Justice Ministry said. (more)
A legally blind Massachusetts phone hacker admitted this week to federal computer intrusion and witness intimidation charges that could put him away for as long as 13 years.Matthew Weigman, 18, pleaded guilty to two felonies before U.S. Magistrate Judge Paul D. Stickney in Dallas on Tuesday. Known in the telephone party-line scene as "Li'l Hacker," Weigman is widely considered one of the best phone hackers alive.In his plea deal with prosecutors, Weigman, who was born blind, admitted to a long criminal resume (.pdf). Among other things, he confessed to conspiring with other telephone hooligans who made hundreds of false calls to police that sent armed SWAT teams bursting into the homes of their party-line enemies.In a new revelation, Weigman also admitted eavesdropping on customer service calls to Sprint, by dialing into a phone line used by Sprint supervisors to monitor their employees. Weigman parked on the spy line to overhear customers giving out their credit card numbers, which he memorized and passed to accomplices. Weigman and his friends used the numbers to purchase computers and other electronics. (more) (Joe Engressia)
Lighter Camerafrom the seller's web site...Date time stamping with 8Gb large memoryLighter Camera with built in Micro DVR for your home or office surveillance when you are not there. it records everything what you missed while you are away. Built in Digital Audio Video recorder will give you all the evidence you need to prove in the court in case some one came to your home or office for bad purpose. You don't have to worry about the battery as it can work up to 6 long hours in a single charge. Micro SD card can record up to 8 hours of Very Fine audio video on 8GB Micro SD Card. (more)
Why do we mention it?
So you know what you are up against.
VD (Viral Data)
Japan - Virus infection of university campus computers via USB thumb drives has become common, according to the results of Yomiuri Shimbun survey that found more than 500 such incidents were reported in 13 universities. (more)
January 28, 2009 - the United States, Canada, and 27 European countries celebrate Data Privacy Day for the second time.Designed to raise awareness and generate discussion about data privacy practices and rights, Data Privacy Day activities in the United States have included privacy professionals, corporations, government officials, and representatives, academics, and students.One of the primary goals of Data Privacy Day is to promote privacy awareness and education among teens across the United States. Data Privacy Day also serves the important purpose of furthering international collaboration and cooperation around privacy issues. (more)
This week's prelude to Data Privacy Day...
• Heartland May Be the Biggest Data Breach Ever
• Britain's biggest cyber theft case - Monster.co.uk
Privacy is the right to decide who has access to your personal information and how that information should be used.Think carefully about the information you share online and understand how social networking sites work to use them responsibly and safely.1. Know your potential audience.Be aware that anyone, including site operators, advertisers, colleges, potential employers, friends and parents, as well as dangerous people or sexual predators may access, use, and forward the information you share online.2. Use privacy settings to control who has access to information you put online, including your profile page, your photos, your “wall,” and your online journals. Do not share your phone numbers, home address, date of birth, school or team name, travel plans, social security number or other national ID numbers, family financial information, bank or credit card numbers. Don’t share your passwords with anyone.3. Don’t accept “friends” you do not know in the real world. Never agree to meet anyone in person you have only “met” online.4. Think before you post.If you would not want a college or a prospective employer to see it, or if you wouldn’t share it with your parents, don’t post it. Once you put something online, it is difficult if not impossible to take it back. Respect the privacy of others. Don’t identify others on your page in a way theywould not identify themselves or post photos they would not post. Protect yourself. Ask friends to take down content about you that you would not post yourself, and un-tag photos that you may find embarrassing in the future.5. You are your own best protector online.Online conduct has consequences. Make smart choices.(print version courtesy of Intel)
David Mitchell Clark, an electrician from Rancho Cucamonga has pleaded guilty to burglary for installing spy cameras in the bathrooms of homes.Prosecutor Jason Anderson says investigators found 18 DVDs in Clark's house with hours of surveillance of women and families in various states of undress. Sheriff's investigators eventually tied him to nine installed cameras.Investigators say the 35-year-old Clark told them last year he had installed one hidden camera in a Rancho Cucamonga home "because the wife was hot." (more) (more)
Mike Chapple handles a Skype question...
Q: Can an attacker gain important and private information from my phone through a peer-to-peer network?A: Peer-to-peer telephone services such as Skype offer a way to save significant money on telephone services. By leveraging peer-to-peer networks to route calls around the world, every call becomes a local one. Peer-to-peer services allow telephone calls to be routed through the privately owned equipment of one or more unknown individuals. This raises a number of confidentiality, integrity and availability concerns, and little information is available about what, if any, security controls these services have put in place to protect your telephone calls.While this is an interesting technology, I would not recommend that it be used for any private communications. (more)Additional considerations...• Skype says their communications is encrypted.• Some say Skype encryption can be bypassed.
More than quarter of women use the internet to secretly spy on their partners, a survey has revealed... The research, by Virgin Media, showed that an astonishing 88 per cent of the population use the internet every day and that women are more that twice as likely to spy on their partners than men are... The under 35s are most paranoid, with 64 per cent of all interviewed admitting they have snooped at a partner's online communication or internet history. (more)

prism 200 is a handheld through-wall radar, which has been designed to be used by police, special forces or the emergency services. It provides quick and covert intelligence on the movement and location of people in a room or building - without the need for invasive sensors.
prism 200 has been designed for situations where a high degree of insight is essential for success. This compact, portable and durable product uses advanced signal processing to highlight moving people and objects in cluttered environments, through doors or brick, block and concrete walls. (more & videos) (brochure)
Nitrotek, a seller of radio controlled helicopters and cars, announced that they are now offering a large scale, outdoor spy copter with a built in video camera and receiver. They claim this is the first fully functional dual rotor radio controlled helicopter with a camera built in offered in the world. ≈$206.00 (more)
The world's smallest working fuel cell has been created by US chemical engineers, at just 3 millimetres across. Future versions of the tiny hydrogen-fuelled power pack could replace batteries in portable gadgets.While batteries are used to do that today, fuel cells are able to store more energy in the same space. Even the most advanced batteries have an energy density an order of magnitude smaller than that of a hydrogen fuel tank.Yet batteries are much easier to make at the small scale than the pumps and control electronics of a fuel cell. And small pumps can use more energy than they generate. (more)
A Connecticut man was arrested Sunday accused of videotaping guests at a Cape Cod resort.Alan Gillette, 50, of Winsted, Conn., was also in possession of a stun gun, pepper spray and drugs when he was arrested...Gillette was seen at the Cape Codder Resort and Spa videotaping guests at the pool and in the sauna... Witnesses said the man had a camera hidden under a towel. The hotel has a policy banning video cameras in the pool area.Police were able to hear conversations taking place in the pool and sauna area on the video... There was also footage from inside the men's locker room and audio recording of muffled conversations while the showers were running, police said.Gillette pleaded not guilty... to charges of possession of chemical mace without an FID card, selling or possessing an electric stun gun and unlawful wiretapping. He was ordered to stay away from the Cape Codder. (more)
Obama’s spy-proof BlackBerry still a security risk, claims Microsoft..."You would be sending your data outside the country," Fox News quoted Randy Siegel, a Microsoft enterprise mobile strategist... He stressed that even if RIM routed information through a U.S. data center, the devices aren't built to NSA's security specs. (more)
A New Zealand man has found confidential US military files on an MP3 player he bought in an Oklahoma thrift shop.Chris Ogle, 29, paid $15 for the player and when he plugged it into his computer he found 60 pages of military data. The files contained the names and personal details of US soldiers, including some who served in Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as information about equipment deployed to bases and a mission briefing. (more)
Lebanon - Progressive Socialist Party leader Walid Jumblat accused Minister of Telecommunications Jebran Bassil of illegally allowing bugging of communications. Jumblat, in an article published by the PSP's weekly al-Anbaa on Tuesday, said Bassil is hosting a colonel from the General Security Directorate at the ministry where he runs a network of employees "specialized in bugging calls." (more)
Need password privacy when using un-secure computers?
Afraid your significant other placed a keystroke logger?
Want to keep your net surfing URLs private?
While no solution provides 100% security, but bypassing the traditional keyboard will help...
My-T-Soft Virtual Onscreen KeyboardsI-Tech Virtual Laser Keyboard (bluetooth)Click-N-Type Virtual KeyboardMountFocus Virtual KeyboardFREE Virtual Keyboard by MiloSoft
For the more technically advanced...
Virtual Keyboard Interface - Adds a virtual keyboard to text fields, password fields and text areas allowing keyboard-less input of text and special characters. Install the script and double-click on one of the form element types above to display the keyboard. This is a Greasemonkey script and will work wherever Greasemonkey works. (download page)
Airport Security offers a satirical critique of airport security practices circa early fall 2006, when security agencies in the US and abroad changed their policies to prohibit common items like toothpaste and hair gel.
Do knee-jerk reactions that limit our freedom of expression and travel make us safer? In Airport Security you inspect each passenger and his luggage and remove the forbidden items before allowing the passenger to go through -- but the list of forbidden items changes on a moment-to-moment basis. Prohibited items may include pants, mouthwash, and hummus. (more) (play it now)
Airport Insecurity - a game about inconvenience and the trade-offs between security and rights in American airports. While the government wants you to believe that increased protection and reduced rights are necessary to protect you from terrorism, the effectiveness of airport security practices is uncertain.
Airport Insecurity allows you to explore these issues in context: the game's rules are based on government reports about airport security practices since 2002. To consider the game's implications fully, players are encouraged to play the game while waiting in line at airport security. (more)
If so, how did they do it?
(click to enlarge)

WA - Everett lawmaker, Mike Sells, has filed a bill in the state legislature to make it illegal to videotape teachers without their knowledge. The bill is in response to the Everett School District's use of hidden cameras when it was investigating a teacher in 2007...
The bill currently in the state legislature would require that all staff must be notified in writing in advance before video surveillance is used. Schools would also be required to post written notices outside any rooms that may have hidden cameras. Current law allows for hidden cameras as long as no audio is recorded. (more)
A cautionary tale...
Whether he's known as a boardroom brawler or maybe the savior of SemGroup LP, John Catsimatidis doesn't mind his reputation as a man of his convictions or contradictions...His takeover of United Refining paid back creditors 100 cents on the dollar, but hit a judicial bump when the company's security apparatus admitted to illegally wiretapping some staffers at the Warren headquarters. Catsimatidis was never accused of any personal wrongdoing in the wiretapping case. He said that the surveillance began before he owned the company and before it was actually illegal under Pennsylvania law. "The law changed in 1986, but they kept doing it," he recalled. "I didn't know about it until afterwards." The security firm kept up the wiretaps after Catsimatidis took control of United Refining, according to reports. He replied that it was stopped and the offending employee was fired once he discovered the practice. (more)Due Diligence...CEOs... Quarterly inspections to discover electronic eavesdropping can uncover rogue Security operations like this one. We can help. Please call us.
Canada - There is an extremely fine line between what might be considered voyeurism and employee surveillance as Cornerstone Properties learned. It also learned that a high price can be exacted if an employer installs a secret camera to monitor its employees. Colleen Colwell, commercial manager, had been working for the company for more than seven years, when she learned a secret camera had been installed in the ceiling of her office almost a year earlier by her boss, Trent Krauel, Cornerstone's vice-president in finance. Colwell resigned and sued both Cornerstone and Krauel for constructive dismissal. Justice David Little found for Colwell. (more)