Sunday, December 23, 2007

Update - Rayney ‘phone’ man in key talks

Australia - A defense lawyer for the man accused of bugging the telephone calls of murdered Supreme Court registrar Corryn Rayney was negotiating with the prosecution, Perth Magistrate’s Court was told yesterday.

Timothy Matthew Pearson appeared on one Commonwealth charge of intercepting a communication passing over a telecommunications system. (more)

Friday, December 21, 2007

How-to leave a spare key without worry - Key Safes

AccessPoint - Digital KeySafe
Designer key box with electronic time stamp that records last nine access events. Easy to use, one hand operation ensures quick access. Low profile, subtle design compliments door frame with a variety of natural colors. Change code anytime for added security. Solid, weather resistant metal construction. Know what time your children and others enter your home.


KeySure - One-time Use Plastic Container
Patented key control product is a "keyless" lock box. It is a container in the form of a security seal, to access the key; the box must be physically broken. It prevents keys from being handled, duplicated or used surreptitiously. A product for keys not accessed on a regular basis. (additional options)

Alert - Analog Cellular - Discontinued

As of midnight on February 18, 2008, cellular telephone companies will not be required to provide analog service. While most wireless telephone users will not be affected by this transition (often called the “analog cellular sunset”), some users may be affected. In addition, the transition could affect some alarm systems and some users of OnStar in-vehicle communications service.

You will not be affected by the transition if you:
use a digital handset; or
• subscribe to wireless service from Sprint/Nextel or T-Mobile.

You may be affected by the transition if you:
• use an analog-only handset (there are very few of these left in service); and
• receive service from a cellular telephone company, including AT&T Mobility, Verizon Wireless, Alltel, US Cellular, and Dobson (and other companies that market their services as “Cellular One”); or if you
• use service that may rely on analog cellular radio equipment, such as an alarm system with a wireless radio link or OnStar service in an older vehicle. (more)

Vendetta 1 - Berlusconi wiretap posted on internet

vendetta - noun
1. A feud between two families or clans that arises out of a slaying and is perpetuated by retaliatory acts of revenge; a blood feud.
2. A bitter, destructive feud.

An Italian newspaper has posted a seven-minute secretly taped phone call on the internet in which Silvio Berlusconi (former Italian president) apparently tries to persuade state broadcaster, RAI's head of drama to hire two actresses. The alleged reason is to encourage two centre-left politicians linked to the women to join his opposition bloc in parliament...

The phone call was recorded by police as part of an ongoing investigation into corruption allegations concerning Berlusconi and RAI. Italy's richest man denies any wrongdoing, dismissing the country's prosecutors as a "Red Army". (more)

Vendetta 2 - Ferrari vs. McLaren

vendetta - noun
1. A feud between two families or clans that arises out of a slaying and is perpetuated by retaliatory acts of revenge; a blood feud.
2. A bitter, destructive feud.


Ferrari still fuming over spy case...

Ferrari's senior management has made it clear that it remains far from happy about McLaren's handling of the spy affair - and especially their continued insistence they had done nothing wrong until a recent public letter of apology.

Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo and company CEO Jean Todt both hit out at McLaren during a meeting with the Italian press, stating they were furious at the way their Woking-based rivals approached the FIA hearings into the spying affair.

Quoted by Corriere dello Sport, Todt said: "At the hearing McLaren came with 200 signatures of managers saying they never had access to the information.

"Then, three months later, when the FIA did its verifications, it was demonstrated that was completely false. They went corrupting their own personnel to make them sign false documentation. (more)

Ferrari Rewards Photocopy Employee Who Tipped Off F1 to Spy Scandal...
Montezemolo also revealed that the English photocopy shop employee, who alerted Ferrari about confidential information in McLaren's possession, has been invited to the team's Maranello factory. (more)

Spybuster's Movie of the Month

Charlie Wilson's War
Tom Hanks and Philip Seymour Hoffman turn in their greatest performances in years in this historical thriller riddled with hilarious one-liners.


Hanks stars as Charlie Wilson, a congressman from Texas ... Upon returning to the States, Wilson immediately calls for a meeting with a U.S. security bigwig. CIA Agent Gust Avrakotos (Hoffman) ends up at his office door.

After a hysterical sequence of events during their brief meeting that includes a cocaine scandal, a bottle of wine and a bugging device, the two pair up to try to covertly help the Afghan war effort. (more) (trailer) (reality check)

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Retro Comm Device Thwarts Wiretappers

Despite the widespread proliferation of iPhones, Blackberries and other state-of-the art devices, concerns over invasions of privacy by the Bush Administration is leading to a Luddite-like return to more primitive modes of communication, including the time-honored “tin can and string.”

While somewhat larger and less chic than the more high-tech hand-held devices, tin can conversations” are extremely difficult to “bug,” and create no permanent record of communications that can later be “data-mined” by NSA super-computers.

Although the traditional range of these home-made devices was typically no more than 55 feet, newer, mass-produced versions offer strings as long as 55 miles, and come in a variety of colors, including black, gold, hot pink, and for traditionalists, “silver can.”

Apple has announced that it’s coming out with the ”iCan” next Spring, which will also double as a device to download music. Unfortunately, the only selection available will be the “can-can” song. (more)

Ex-Spy Heads Convicted of Wiretapping

S. Korea - The high court has upheld a lower court's ruling that found two former heads of the National Intelligence Service (NIS) guilty for their involvement in the agency's illegal wiretapping of phone conversations of high-profile figures.

The Seoul High Court Thursday confirmed the sentences on Lim Dong-won, 73, and Shin Gunn, 66, former NIS directors during the Kim Dae-jung administration (1998-2003) of three years imprisonment suspended for four years.

"The tapping team operated 24 hours a day and Lim and Shin were aware of the operation," the court said in its ruling.

They regularly received reports of cell phone conversations of political and business leaders, journalists and even ordinary citizens, it said.

"Consequently the two were aware that the information was collected through illegal eavesdropping," the court said. (more)

Santa tracks naughty and nice kids with RFID

Santa has been spying on kids for centuries but now, his these days, his job is easier, thanks to modern technology.

“At Santa Claus Office in Finland, St. Nick’s elves give EPC Gen 2 tags to visiting boys and girls, who wear them so he knows who’s naughty or nice.”


EPC Gen 2 tags translates to RFID (Radio Frequency IDentification), aka spy tags. (more) (more)

Spy back on Santa. (more)

UK - Council Office Bug Discovered

UK - It's a case of 'Bah humbug' - with the emphasis on 'bug' - at the beleaguered offices of Craigavon Borough Council this Christmas.

The council has come under the spotlight again after a bugging device was found in the office of a senior member of staff.

The Dictophone-type device was removed by the Mayor, Robert Smith, who has said little more than the matter is 'being dealt with'.

The staff member involved has apologised, saying that his actions were connected to his ongoing dispute within the Civic Centre. (more)

Spy planes to recharge by clinging to power lines

The next time you see something flapping in the breeze on an overhead power line, squint a little harder. It may not be a plastic bag or the remnants of a party balloon, but a tiny spy plane stealing power from the line to recharge its batteries.

The idea comes from the US Air Force Research Lab (AFRL) in Dayton, Ohio, US, which wants to operate extended surveillance missions using remote-controlled planes with a wingspan of about a meter, but has been struggling to find a way to refuel to extend the plane's limited flight duration.


So the AFRL is developing an electric motor-powered micro air vehicle (MAV) that can "harvest" energy when needed by attaching itself to a power line. It could even temporarily change its shape to look more like innocuous piece of trash hanging from the cable. (more)

Bondsman sentenced in illegal wiretapping

MO - A part-time bail bondsman from Sparta was sentenced today in federal court for wiretapping a Springfield woman’s telephone, according to John F. Wood, United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri.

Richard A. Hugh, 54, was sentenced to 18 months in federal prison without parole.

Hugh placed the phone tap on the victim’s telephone line in December 2005 in an attempt to get information that would help him locate Basil Minor, who was a fugitive in a Lawrence County circuit court case. Hugh recorded conversations from that telephone from Dec. 13 to 24, 2005, using equipment he purchased at Radio Shack. (more)

Surveillance Society: High-Tech Cameras Watch You

In the era of computer-controlled surveillance, your every move could be captured by cameras, whether you're shopping in the grocery store or driving on the freeway. Proponents say it will keep us safe, but at what cost? (more)

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Decoding Spy-Speak

Ex-agents bring covert lingo to the world of corporate espionage. (more)

Spies find higher-paying assignments in business

...from a Condé Nast Portfolio article...
They're leaving "the Company" to snoop on your company. How C.I.A. agents are pushing corporate espionage to ominous new extremes. ...corporate espionage is becoming almost as sophisticated as government spying... The best estimate is that several hundred former intelligence agents now work in corporate espionage... ...extreme methods of electronic monitoring... The influx of spies into the corporate sector isn't limited to Americans. ...confidential reports by outside private investigators tell a story of corporate espionage run amok. (more)