Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Technology Makes Anyone a Spy

Michael Strahan An Example Case Of Surveillance Spyware Used On Loved Ones
An estimated 3.4 million Americans have been subjected to stalking...

When former Giants defensive end Michael Strahan reportedly suspected his girlfriend Nicole Murphy, actor Eddie Murphy's ex-wife, of cheating on him, he allegedly installed a tracking device in her car on two separate occasions, reports CBS News science and technology correspondent Daniel Sieberg reports.

And those weren't the only times Strahan has been accused of using technology to monitor those around him. His ex-wife has accused him of tapping her phone and installing a secret video camera... (more) (video)

Eggs in One Basket - A Cautionary Tale

New Zealand - A promising engineering student who deliberately deleted crucial information from his employer's computer backup systems cost the company hundreds of thousands of dollars in lost business and data recovery.

Gareth Pert, 23, nearly crippled Hamilton business Progressive Hydraulics while acting out of "pure vindictiveness", said company director Rodney Sharp...

Pert was arrested last month at Auckland International Airport upon his return from Afghanistan where he had been working since the sabotage was reported.


"His motivation was that he believed he was worth more than he was getting paid. Instead of talking to us, he started adding on five hours on his time card, so we pulled him up on it," Sharp says. "I was probably the first person to sit him down and put him in his place... I said, `You've cribbed your time cards.' He said, `I'm worth it'. I said, `I don't care how good you are, it's just dishonest'." Pert then wiped the backups and never returned to work.

There is evidence he also copied some of the commercially sensitive data but he told police he couldn't remember what he did with it.
(more)
Try saying "Afghanistan banana stand" to him.

Crypt Your Stick - A Cautionary Tale

Scotland - A USB drive is missing from Lothian and Borders Police with details of hundreds of police investigations... “It is understood that the information contained on the stick was not encrypted as it was information being transferred within a secure compound within Police Headquarters,” the police spokesman revealed. (more)
How to Crypt Your Stick for FREE.

Monday, March 9, 2009

TSCM Friend & Colleague - Patrick Bennett

The universe of private eavesdropping detection practitioners is small, maybe several hundred.

The world of knowledgeable private practitioners is smaller, maybe fifty.

Then, there is a tiny archipelago of knowledgeable and respected specialists who gravitated to this profession by their innate desire to help others.

Patrick Allan Bennett was one of these Islands. All who knew him, miss him. All who might have known him suffer the loss, unaware.

It is not surprising that one of Patrick's outstanding accomplishments was that he was the first Eagle Scout of Troop 74 in Marinwood, CA.

Professionally, he was a private investigator and Vice President of Walsingham Associates – one of the very best TSCM companies in the business. I know. I regularly entrust my clients to their care; for over 15 years. Fortunately, Walsingham Associates continues under the guidence of William Bennett.

His family's description is moving, "Patrick was a kind, gentle man who loved his family and valued his friendships." You can see it in his face, can't you?

There will be a Memorial Service from 11:00 am to 1:00 pm, Tuesday, March 10 at the Lima Family Mortuary Chapel, (408) 263-2868, located at 48800 Warm Springs Blvd, Fremont, CA 94539.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Marin Council Boy Scouts of America, 225 West End Ave. San Rafael, CA 94901

Good-bye, friend.

Taiwan busts mobile phone spy software

...all Symbian 60 handsets are at risk.
Taiwan - Authorities in Taipei raided a shop accused of selling mobile phone spying software on Friday, warning that many cellphones are vulnerable to surreptitious eavesdropping and monitoring of text messages...

Police said that the cellphone spyware was used by private investigators to catch people in extramarital affairs, but that it had also been used in instances of industrial espionage. (more)

Wiretapping - Crackdown & Self-defense

Turkey - Justice Minister Mehmet Ali Şahin has announced illegal wiretappings will be more severely punished through a planned amendment in the penal code.

Turkey - Phone tapping and bugging scandals caused booming sales of GSM "jamming" device that jams GSM radio signals. Demand mostly comes from businessmen and artists. "The price range is between 380 TL and 30,000 TL for jamming devices which can stop all mobile phone conversations and bugging," says Mustafa Ender, executive of a company selling jammers. "Another device that spots hidden cameras starts from 575 TL," he says. (more)

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Business Espionage - Goodyear Tire

TN - Goodyear called in the FBI when the company suspected someone was spying on closely guarded technology for making tires.

The global security chief for Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. said in a statement Saturday that the company alerted the FBI after an internal investigation into what he called an apparent attempt in 2007 to steal proprietary technology. (more)

This is an excellent example of a properly run corporate security program. Spot the spies during their intelligence collection process. Result: Damage thwarted, cheaply. (formal version of this philosophy)

Interesting back-story...
The FBI probe was followed by federal charges Friday against two engineers for a Tennessee company, Wyko Tire Technology Inc. in Greenback near Knoxville. The engineers, Clark Alan Roberts and Sean Edward Howley, pleaded not guilty to counts including trade secret theft, wire fraud and conspiracy... Wyko, part of Netherlands-based Eriks Group, designs and builds tire making equipment for tire companies, including Akron, Ohio-based Goodyear... Wyko had contracted to provide Haohau South China Guilin Rubber Co. Ltd. under a $1.2 million order. Wyko had never built one of the machines, the indictment says.

Top security marketplace directories...

Security Director News Marketplace
Security Consultants (IAPSC)
Security Industry Buyer's Guide (ASIS)

Taliban kill two on charges of spying

For the past several years, we read in the news that the Taliban are killing "spies" at the rate of 1-7 per week. Discovery of this many "spies" at such a sustained and consistent rate strains credibility. More likely, spy demise is a scared-straight tactic with a personal vendetta side benefit.

This week...
Taliban militants in Pakistan's restive tribal area on Friday killed two men they accused of spying for US forces stationed across the border in Afghanistan, officials said.

The bullet-riddled bodies of Afghan refugee Sher Khan and Pakistani tribal elder Nazar Jan were found early Friday at separate places in the North Waziristan tribal district bordering Afghanistan, officials in those areas said.

"Notes found with the bodies said the men were killed for spying for the US," tribal police official Rukh Niaz Khan told AFP.

Islamist militants frequently kidnap and kill local tribesmen or Afghan refugees on charges of spying for the Pakistani government or US forces, who are battling a Taliban-led insurgency across the border in Afghanistan. (more)

Taiwanese official indicted on spying for China

A senior employee of Taiwan's presidential office was indicted Friday on charges of providing classified information to rival China... Taiwan and China have routinely engaged in espionage against each other since they split amid civil war in 1949. Both have used financial aid in an attempt to lure away the other's allies. (more)

If only lottery numbers were so predictable.

Colombia spyservice to be allowed wiretaps again...
Colombia President Álvaro Uribe signed a law that returns the authority to conduct wiretaps to intelligence agency DAS, lawmakers say. The DAS was relieved from that authority ten days ago after news broke the agency was illegally wiretapping political opponents, judges and journalists. (more) (background 2007) (background 2009)

Employee Surveillance - Cameras in the Sandbox

NY - Highway department workers in several Lower Hudson Valley municipalities are finding they will have an extra set of eyes watching as they go about their work.

Clarkstown will become the latest to have surveillance cameras installed in its highway department. Spring Valley recently put in cameras in the village's Department of Public Works, much to the work crews' chagrin...

Workers at the highway department's mechanic shop said that cameras would be put in the area where they repair equipment, and that the surveillance would be invasive.

"Why is it necessary to have these cameras put into the mechanics work area?" they asked in a statement. "This creates a hostile work environment because we don't know the intent of the camera surveillance... This leads us to believe this will be used for disciplinary action," the statement said. (Well, duh.) (more)

Employee Surveillance - Line Drawn in Sand

FutureWatch - Town employees complain of secret surveillance system allegedly installed at mayor's behest.

NY - From his comments in a Feb. 26 article, "Cameras' unannounced installation puzzles Spring Valley DPW employees," you'd think the law applies to everyone except for Spring Valley Mayor George O. Darden.

The last time we checked, eavesdropping was a felony in New York state. If what DPW head Neil Vitiello told our local president is true and Spring Valley DPW workers are being illegally recorded using audio equipment, the village could have legal problems coming that are far bigger than their latest violation of the CSEA contract.

Darden's arrogance knows no bounds. He claims not to know if audio surveillance has been installed. We don't buy that. Isn't this something Darden would be familiar with before using taxpayer dollars to buy or lease cameras? And when were these cameras secured? When CSEA questioned Village Attorney Bruce Levine about the cameras, Levine said he was unaware they had been purchased, let alone installed! (more)
Billy Riccaldo, Beacon, NY — The writer is president, CSEA Southern Region

Friday, March 6, 2009

Easy Mobile & Desk Phone Encryption

Rhode & Schwarz's Telephone Encryption System
The TopSec Mobile is a voice encryption device that can be connected to almost any commercially available mobile phone using a Bluetooth® interface. It provides confidential, tap-proof communications anywhere in the world.

The encryption has been embedded in the TopSec Mobile hardware to avoid the susceptibility of GSM phones to manipulation.

The TopSec Mobile is plug-and-play, compatible with most commercially available mobile phones, interoperable with other TopSec products in analog and digital fixed networks, as well as in mobile radio networks. (more)


Very cool concept. Easy to use with existing phones.
So... if what you have to say is so important, why aren't you using these?

Security Director Budget Booster - Proof a Counterespionage Budget increase is logical

excerpt from an excellent article by Burton and Stewart at stratfor.com...
...And one of the first functions cut during tough times often is corporate security...


Espionage is always a problem corporations must face. Competitors, criminals and even foreign governments often seek ways to gather proprietary information from companies, sometimes to boost their own operational capacities (e.g., to apply critical or emerging technologies to their weapons programs) and sometimes to sell on the open market...

When open source collection efforts fail, more invasive measures must be employed. Sometimes the required information can be obtained via technical surveillance. A faulty information technology system, for example, can expose the company's secrets via remote electronic intrusion conducted from a continent away. Other times, information can be obtained by eavesdropping on telephone calls made by corporate leaders or by using other technical surveillance measures...

With many corporate security departments being cut to the bone, many internal security services focused on the counterterrorism mission and many law enforcement agencies chasing white-collar criminals, it is a good time to be in the intelligence business.

One day we will look back on this time through a counterintelligence lens and see that, although it was a time of bear stock markets, it was a tremendous bull market for practitioners of human intelligence. (
more)