Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Security Alert - HP Printer / Scanners

Security Alert: Low (But you should be aware of it.)
Certain models of HP combination printer and scanner devices contain a feature that could allow for corporate espionage, according to researchers at web security firm Zscaler. 

The feature, called WebScan, allows a user to remotely trigger the scanning functionality and retrieve scanned images via a web browser. This capability could allow anyone on the local area network (LAN) to remotely connect to the scanner and retrieve documents that have been left behind on the scanner, Michael Sutton, vice president of security research at Zscaler, told SCMagazineUS.com on Thursday. 

The feature generally is turned on by default and, in many cases, is not password protected.(more)

Friday, September 3, 2010

TSCM Sweep Finds Cop Bugged

IN - Eavesdropping devices have been found in the office of an Indianapolis deputy police chief believed to be under investigation by the FBI.

Members of the department's Criminal Intelligence Unit were asked Thursday night to conduct an electronics sweep of the office of Deputy Chief of Investigations William Benjamin and found a pinhole camera and a listening device inside a desk drawer...

After the bugging devices were found, Chief Paul Ciesielski issued a statement saying he was going to launch an internal investigation."I did not put it there, did not have anyone put it there, nor did the director," the statement read. "I have opened an internal investigation to find out who did." (more)

UPDATE - The bug found in an IMPD leader's office was not used to eavesdrop on him, police said today.

The device did not work, and it had been left by a previous occupant of the office, according to an e-mail from Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department Chief Paul Ciesielski...

The listening device was found in Deputy Chief William Benjamin's office during a sweep he requested this week... It was unclear what prompted Benjamin to request the sweep of his third-floor office; he did not return a phone call from The Indianapolis Star on Friday. (more)

Soooo... Who was the previous occupant? Why did they have the room bugged? Will that be investigated? And, why did Benjamin request a bug sweep in the first place?

Spybuster Tip #582 - Keystroke Logger Killer

KeyScrambler Personal is a free plug-in for your Web browser that protects everything you type from keyloggers. It defeats keyloggers by encrypting your keystrokes at the keyboard driver level, deep within the operating system. When the encrypted keystrokes reach your browser, KeyScrambler then decrypts them so you see exactly the keys you've typed. Keyloggers can only record the encrypted keys, which are completely indecipherable. (more)

RIM Shot... and you're next Skype

International Telecommunications Union (ITU) secretary-general Hamadoun Toure said BlackBerry maker Research in Motion (RIM) should supply customer data to law enforcement agencies around the world, characterizing the governments’ needs as “genuine” concerns that cannot be ignored.

The ITU is primarily concerned with regulating global radio spectrum usage, supervising telecommunications standards processes, and helping regulate communication satellite orbits and transmission... the agency has no formal regulatory.. however, Toure’s comments certainly reflect the general sentiments of the ITU’s 192 members.

Canada’s RIM has recently faced regulatory issues in a number of countries over encrypted communications handled by its BlackBerry services, with governments like Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, India, Indonesia, and Lebanon all insisting that their governments be permitted access to BlackBerry users’ communications. (more)

Thursday, September 2, 2010

Tabloid's Royal Eavesdrop Keeps Making News

UK - In November 2005, three senior aides to Britain’s royal family noticed odd things happening on their mobile phones. Messages they had never listened to were somehow appearing in their mailboxes as if heard and saved. Equally peculiar were stories that began appearing about Prince William in one of the country’s biggest tabloids, News of the World.

The stories were banal enough (Prince William pulled a tendon in his knee, one revealed). But the royal aides were puzzled as to how News of the World had gotten the information, which was known among only a small, discreet circle. They began to suspect that someone was eavesdropping on their private conversations. 

Scotland Yard collected evidence in 2006 indicating that hundreds of celebrities, government officials, soccer stars – anyone whose personal secrets could be tabloid fodder – might have had their phone messages hacked by reporters at News of the World. Only now, more than four years later, are most of them beginning to find out. (more)

SpyCam Story #583 - Veal

A hidden-camera video that shows severe confinement and other abuses of calves has caused Bob Barker to ask consumers to stop buying veal and dairy products.

The Emmy Award-winning former host of The Price is Right and a longtime animal advocate, Barker narrated the Mercy for Animals (MFA) video and joins the group in asking Americans nationwide to boycott the products that he says sentence animals to “a life of extreme deprivation and suffering.” (more)

How to Kill Flash Zombies

Flash cookies can be used to track you across the Web without telling you. Advertisers are using it to track your movements across the Web.

Or so claims a lawsuit filed by privacy attorney Joseph Malley, one of three he's filed in the last two months against some of the biggest media heavyweights in the world -- Disney, ABC, NBC, MTV, and a host of others.

All use them employ Web ad companies like Quantcast, Specificmedia, and Clearspring to deliver Flash ads, and all of those ads store Flash cookies on your hard drive.

So what's wrong with that? For one thing, most people aren't aware Flash even stores cookies. These cookie files are ridiculously hard to find and manage: You can't get at them from your browser, and they're buried several layers deep inside your Application Data folder on Windows PCs. They can store up to 100K of data per cookie, or about 25 times what a browser cookie can store. And they can be used to recreate tracking cookies you've deleted.

In other words, if you've told an advertiser you don't want to be followed around the Web by deleting its tracking cookie, that advertiser can use Flash to 'respawn' that deleted cookie without telling you -- and continue to track you in secret. Thus Malley's lawsuits, which accuse all of those companies of breaking federal laws against computer intrusion and surveillance.

That respawning bit is why Flash cookies are also called "zombie" cookies. However, like real zombies, they can be stopped -- and you don't even have to cut off their heads (or use cricket bats and vinyl LPs, like in Shaun of the Dead ). You just need to use Adobe's Flash Player Settings Manager. (more)
Click the Adobe link above and set your preferences on the Global Settings Panel. It is easy to do and very worthwhile.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

"Yes, you can record. Yes, you can decide not to."

Australia - Alliance Craton Explorer (a company involved in developing a uranium mine) told the Supreme Court it wanted to use recording devices in committee meetings with Quasar Resources. The companies have a joint venture agreement for the Four Mile uranium project.

Alliance claimed it wanted to protect its interests but Quasar countered that the confidentiality of the meetings could be put at risk. Quasar used its numbers at the meetings to vote against the recordings. It argued in court the use of such devices was in breach of listening and surveillance laws. 

So far, so good.

But Justice John Sulan disagreed, finding it was legitimate for Alliance to use recording devices.

However he also ruled it was acceptable for the committee to decide by a vote whether recording devices could be used. (more)

Security Scrapbook Exclusive
Possible secret recording from the meeting leaked:
"Uranium. Three Mile. Duh!" 

"No, no. Four Mile is a brilliant name. Like, mate... we go the extra mile." 

"Or, a disaster would be that much bigger, you dingo."

"I say we use kilometers instead."

The Byte of the Web Bugs

The Wall Street Journal has been running a series of very interesting - and disturbing - articles the past few days investigating Internet spying and its impact on your privacy.

For instance, did you know that the top fifty US web sites (which account for about 40% of Web pages visited by Americans) install, on average, 64 pieces of tracking technology onto the computers of their visitors? Or, that two-thirds of those tracking files were created by 131 companies, many, if not most, of which are in the business of selling the information they capture from you and me?

Of course, the companies installing the web site tracking software say it is all harmless. In fact, they argue, the information captured about us allows them to create a better on-line experience since the Web ads that we see are tailored to fit our individual interests...

As a result, tracking software on web sites has increased in sophistication to where - using so-called "Web bugs" - your cursor movements on a web page along with what you are typing are being analyzed to create profile of you (or better, your computer) that can be also tracked across web sites. (more)

SpyCam Story #582 - Don't ask, don't tell.

Australia - An army employee alleged to have put a covert filming device in change rooms at his barracks will stand trial. Nathan William Freeman, 27, is charged with indecent filming.

It will be alleged a secret camera resembling a car's key remote was put in change rooms at the Woodside barracks in the Adelaide hills. Police say the item was handed in as lost property and then discovered to be a secret camera on closer inspection. (more)

Reykjavik's Gargoyle SpyCam

Seen during my travels in Iceland this week...










Gargoyle watches the watchers.



Who says Vikings don't have a sense of humor?

Saturday, August 28, 2010

The Eight Most Secretive Companies...

...are also some of the most successful. 
Follow their lead. 
Engage a good counterespionage specialist.

The need for secrecy in business has led to a shadow industry known as industrial espionage. The practices of “spying” used to be physical. A spy would have to be near the product to describe or photograph it. Electronic surveillance replaced this in the second half of the 20th century and “bugs,” wire taps, and digital theft of documents became more popular. Today, espionage is incredibly sophisticated... 

This is a list of eight of the most secretive companies in America, firms which rely heavily on keeping secrets. A breach of their most confidential products or services could damage their current business value and, over time, even destroy a company.
• Apple, Inc.
• Xe Services LLC (formerly Blackwater)
• Renaissance Technologies LLC
• Google, Inc.
• Boeing, Co.
• Monsanto, Co.
• PGP
• The Coca-Cola Company
(more)

HSH Nordbank Chief Nonnenmacher Says He Never Approved or Tolerated Spy

Germany - HSH Nordbank AG Chief Executive Officer Dirk Jens Nonnenmacher said he never approved or tolerated spying at the bank and that the lender will “do everything” to examine allegations that spying took place...

German magazine Der Spiegel reported on Aug. 21 that officials at the bank asked a security company to investigate former HSH Nordbank Chief Operating Officer Frank Roth, who was fired last year. The magazine relied on a document citing an unidentified former security adviser.

Nonnenmacher said the security adviser has since made a statement revoking the allegations... (more)

SpyCam Story #581 - Hill Out

MI - Former Egelston Township Treasurer Brian Lee Hill is free on bond after spending three years in prison on a batch of now-reduced child-pornography convictions...

The longtime elected official spent three years behind bars, almost to the day. He was sentenced Aug. 24, 2007, to 10 concurrent terms of 4 3/4 years to 20 years, as well as shorter concurrent terms -- already served -- for electronic eavesdropping. The eavesdropping convictions were for spying on showering foreign exchange students with a videocamera hidden in his bathroom. (more)

SpyCam Story #580 - The Curtains Caper (UPDATE)

Malaysia - Selangor Mentri Besar Tan Sri Khalid Ibrahim played detective today when he revealed the origins of a spy camera found in his office on August 10.

He said internal investigations by his office have located the factory that made the camera and the store where it had been bought. Khalid also dismissed allegations that it was a “political plot” to not lodge a police report.

The mentri besar had discovered a Fuji-brand camera on a ledge behind the curtains in his office on August 10. He had said checks had also been carried out in the state executive councillors’ offices to detect if there were more hidden cameras. (more)

Thursday, August 26, 2010

The Spying on the Neighbor Fiasco


Don't watch this at work. 
Save it for later. 
Have a nice weekend. (video)

Yet another challenge to the 2-party consent eavesdropping laws

Using an iPhone to secretly record a conversation is not a violation of the Wiretap Act if done for legitimate purposes, a federal appeals court has ruled.

“The defendant must have the intent to use the illicit recording to commit a tort of crime beyond the act of recording itself,” (.pdf) the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled.

Friday’s decision by the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which involves a civil lawsuit over a secret audio recording produced from the 99-cent Recorder app, mirrors decisions in at least three other federal appeals courts.

The lawsuit concerns a family dispute over the making of a dying mother’s will. Days before the Connecticut woman died, her son secretly recorded a kitchen conversation between the son, mother, stepfather and others over how to handle her estate after her death. (more)

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

SpyCam Story #580 - It's curtains for the staff.

East Malaysia - Selangor Menteri Besar Tan Sri Abdul Khalid Ibrahim has denied a suggestion that he would reshuffle his office staff following the discovery of a hidden video camera in the office.

He said the State Government would first find out why the staff in his office had not detected the device. "If we find out it involved the staff in the Menteri Besar's office, then action will be taken against them.

Abdul Khalid stumbled upon a hidden video camera in a gap between the thick curtains in his office on Tuesday. (more)

Did you know... most eavesdropping devices are found by accident?
Imagine the results if people looked occasionally.
Don't want to do it yourself? 
Call the folks who bring you Kevin's Security Scrapbook.
It's what they do best.

Life, art and duffel bags...

Body of Missing British Spy
Found Stuffed in Bag 

in His Apartment
The body of an employee of Britain's spy agency MI6 has been found in a bag in a central London apartment where he may have been murdered two weeks ago, British media reports.

The body of Gareth Williams, 31, was found Monday stuffed in a large sports bag in his bath only a few hundred yards from MI6 headquarters, the Daily Mail reports.

MI6 gathers secret information about Britain's overseas enemies, making the spy a possible target of terrorists, the Mail says.

BBC's security correspondent says it is not clear what the victim did for MI-6, but that it is reported that he was on loan from the Government Communications Headquarters, the electronic eavesdropping agency, implying he was a technical expert. (more)

(more)

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

ACLU challenges Illinois eavesdropping act

Over the past few years, there have been several cases of people being arrested for recording police. The issue is the audio part of the recording. In some states, the law requires the consent of all parties to the conversation. The ACLU has taken notice... and exception to what they see as a double standard and a violation of the First Amendment to the Constitution.

It's not unusual or illegal for police officers to flip on a camera as they get out of their squad car to talk to a driver they've pulled over.

But in Illinois, a civilian trying to make an audio recording of police in action is breaking the law.

"It's an unfair and destructive double standard," said Adam Schwartz, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois.

In its lawsuit, the ACLU pointed to six Illinois residents who have faced felony charges after being accused of violating the state's eavesdropping law for recording police making arrests in public venues.

On Wednesday, the ACLU filed a federal lawsuit in Chicago challenging the Illinois Eavesdropping Act, which makes it criminal to record not only private but also public conversations made without consent of all parties. (more)

---

That Anthony Graber broke the law in early March is indisputable. He raced his Honda motorcycle down Interstate 95 in Maryland at 80 mph, popping a wheelie, roaring past cars and swerving across traffic lanes... Anthony Graber was arrested for posting a video of his traffic stop on YouTube. (video and report)

YouTube still features Graber’s encounter along with numerous other witness videos. "The message is clearly, ‘Don’t criticize the police,’" said David Rocah, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland who is part of Graber’s defense team. "With these charges, anyone who would even think to record the police is now justifiably in fear that they will also be criminally charged." Carlos Miller, a Miami journalist who runs the blog "Photography Is Not a Crime," said he has documented about 10 arrests since he started keeping track in 2007. (more)

"Bugging teacher... sweet-ish, fer sure."

Sweden - Two Stockholm schoolgirls have been taken to court for trying to bug their teachers during a grading conference. They were found out after one of them revealed all on Facebook.

The pair, who are in their early teens, came up with the idea after finding a key to the staff common room. They bought basic bugging equipment in a gadget shop, waited until the end of the school day, and planted the device in the staff room.

The girls, who attend a middle school in the capital, planned to listen in on a meeting the following day at which teachers would decide their grades. They were hoping to glean information that would enable them to get their grades improved.

The plan might have gone off without a hitch if one of the girls in her enthusiasm had not revealed all on Facebook, according to Metro. The girls were prosecuted for trespass and arbitrary conduct and fined 2,000 kronor ($270) each by Stockholm District Court. (more)

Monday, August 23, 2010

Business Espionage - Walt Disney Co.

The boyfriend of a former Walt Disney Co. administrative assistant admitted to engaging in a scheme to sell early access to the company's earnings report in U.S. district court in Manhattan Monday.

Yonni Sebbag, 30 years old, and his girlfriend Bonnie Hoxie, the former assistant to Disney's head of communications, allegedly contacted more than a dozen hedge funds and investment companies anonymously in March, offering to provide an early look at Disney's earnings.
"I disclosed material and nonpublic information about the Walt Disney Co. to outside investors," Mr. Sebbag said. (more)

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Business Espionage - The Counterfeiters

A shopkeeper in Italy placed an order with a Chinese sneaker factory in Putian for 3,000 pairs of white Nike Tiempo indoor soccer shoes. It was early February, and the shopkeeper wanted the Tiempos pronto. Neither he nor Lin, the factory manager, were authorized to make Nikes. They would have no blueprints or instructions to follow. But Lin didn’t mind. He was used to working from scratch. A week later, Lin, who asked that I only use his first name, received a pair of authentic Tiempos, took them apart, studied their stitching and molding, drew up his own design and oversaw the production of 3,000 Nike clones. A month later, he shipped the shoes to Italy. “He’ll order more when there’s none left,” Lin told me recently, with confidence...

Counterfeiters played a low-budget game of industrial espionage, bribing employees at the licensed factories to lift samples or copy blueprints. Shoes were even chucked over a factory wall, according to a worker at one of Nike’s Putian factories. It wasn’t unusual for counterfeit models to show up in stores before the real ones did. (more)

Mandela's house 'was bugged'

It has been revealed that former president Nelson Mandela's Houghton house was bugged ahead the African National Congress's 2007 national conference. ...the listening device bug was discovered in the old Statesman's house by the police's VIP protection unit during a sweeping exercise. (more)

Oo-ee, oo-ee baby. Won't ya let me take you on a spy cruise?

Old man Panetta is runnin' my shoes
No use t'sittin' and a'singin' the blues
So be my snitch, you got nothin' to lose
Won't ya let me take you on a spy cruise? 

Hope aboard the S.S. Surreal below and sing-a-long.

Michael Hayden, the former CIA Director, has always asserted that “the war on terrorism is inherently an intelligence war.” This November, the “SPY CRUISE” will be sailing. On the cruise everything you wanted to know about intelligence but could not ask will be discussed, that is except classified information. NewsReal Blog interviewed four of the speakers to get their take on what will be discussed. (more)
SpyCruise® is a private group aboard a cruise ship where members attend exclusive lectures and talks on espionage, spies, intelligence, counterterrorism and more. Speakers are intelligence experts, leaders, officers, operatives, analysts, authors and historians, many of whom served in the US Intelligence Community. Each cruise we choose a different ship, a different destination and a different agenda.

SpyCruise® is a unique opportunity for anyone interested in the topic of intelligence to meet and learn from real experts in the intelligence field as well as others who share the same interest in this topic and history, world affairs, intelligence, military, books, etc. Lectures are normally once a day and the rest of the time is yours to enjoy the cruise ship and its excursions at different destinations. (more)

NEXT SPYCRUISE: November 13-20, 2010 in the Caribbean


Extra credit: Intellectual property transfer, or not? 
You decide.
Sea Cruise & Rockin' Pneumonia 
Sweet Little Sixteen & Surfin' USA