Monday, February 3, 2014

Bergen University Admits Spying on Students

Norway - Every student has their own access card to make use of everything from the schools library to the toilets. When the students swipe their card, person, time and place gets registered and saved for 90 days...

With this system, the University can track all of the students´ movements... 

Law student Peter Haraldsen believes that this type of spying is illegal. He demands the University to stop logging their students´ movements... 

The Norwegian Data Protection Authority says that Bergen University might have crossed an illegal path, because the cards registers movements without asking the student to verify it with a pin code. (more)

Fox News Report on High-tech ‘Peeping Toms’

If there is one place in the world you expect to have privacy, it’s the bathroom. But a FOX 6 Investigation finds more and more women are finding their sense of security shattered by hidden cameras in the most private places.

Local prosecutors say the problem is getting worse as technology makes the cameras smaller and more affordable for the average consumer. In other words, you don’t have to be a secret agent or private investigators to own a hidden camera anymore. You can buy a high resolution video camera and self-contained recorder disguised as a ball point pen for less than it costs to fill your car up with gas.

In fact, hidden cameras are easy to find for sale on websites like Amazon, eBay, Craiglist and a host of websites that cater to private investigators and law enforcement, and specialize in sales of covert video gear. (more)



Spying Landlord Hit with $1M Verdict

MD - A Montgomery County Circuit Court jury has found a Chevy Chase man liable for more than $1 million in damages for using a hidden camera to spy on a former tenant and her then-boyfriend. (more)

Sunday, February 2, 2014

When and Where Do Security Breach Laws Apply?

via Robert Ellis Smith...
"Each state law on security-breach notification is significantly different. What are those differences? Go here and find out. ...Of course subscribers to PRIVACY JOURNAL knew this nine months ago."

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Sad: Ex-Spy Sells Special-Edition Watch on eBay

An unemployed former British spy is so hard-up he is selling his special-edition MI5 watch on eBay.

The ex-spook put his Breitling diver’s watch on the auction site in a bid to raise money because he lost his job with MI5 three years ago.

He is selling the specially commissioned time piece even though there are only a few hundred in circulation and they have never been displayed in public.


“This watch is a limited edition which could only be purchased by serving officers of MI5 British Security Service during their centenary.

“The watch was commissioned to celebrate their 100th anniversary.“So far I have had good offers and considerable interest on eBay and I must admit, I will be very sorry to be losing the watch as I have little to remind me of my time with the service.”

When he first bought the watch he paid more than £1,000 for it and the bids had reached more than £3,500 so far. (more)

Scientists Create Artifical Blowhard

The device, called an acoustic circulator, runs counter to the principle that sound waves, and other types of waves, are a two-way street.

The findings, published in Friday's issue of the journal Science, could lead to the sound equivalent of a one-way mirror. With such a device, people can hear someone talking, but they themselves cannot be heard.

There are some obviously stealthy ways to use the method, such as in spying devices. 

"I can listen to you, but you cannot detect me back, you cannot hear my presence," Alù told LiveScience.

...the principle could also potentially be used to create one-way light waves. (Ghosts?!?!)
(more)

Spy Regulations Too Secret for Words

South Africa - Clean, smart spooks only, please. And be sure you can read between the lines to guess the missing employment regulations.

Lengthy new regulations for the State Security Agency (SSA) were issued this week by State Security Minister Siyabonga Cwele, aimed at professionalizing the service. It emphasizes the need for ethics, fairness and a commitment to the constitution.

Parts of the regulations are so secret, they weren’t gazetted. Although the regulations are 73 pages long, 21 of the 27 sections are missing. (more)


Thursday, January 30, 2014

"And then, we mandate implants to remotely stop people."

The European Union is secretly developing a "remote stopping" device to be fitted to all cars that would allow the police to disable vehicles at the flick of a switch from a control room.

Confidential documents from a committee of senior EU police officers, who hold their meetings in secret, have set out a plan entitled "remote stopping vehicles" as part of wider law enforcement surveillance and tracking measures.

"The project will work on a technological solution that can be a 'build in standard' for all cars that enter the European market," said a restricted document.

The devices, which could be in all new cars by the end of the decade, would be activated by a police officer working from a computer screen in a central headquarters. (more)


"Calling all hackers. Calling all hackers..."

New SpyCam App for Android Phones and Tablets

via droidforums.net...
The new spycam app by "dooblou", SECuRET SpyCam, makes you an instant gum shoe! 

There are maybe some not so ethical uses for this, but then again this app would make it easy to see who is stealing your juice out of the office cooler, or what exactly the babysitter is doing with your kid. 

The app turns any Android phone or tablet camera as well as a remote camera into your very own motion triggered spycam. With this app your device will capture stills or video when activated by any motion within its field of view and then either save or email the photo or video. 


 

This app has apparently already caught several criminals in the act of stealing cars, and breaking into homes. 

You don't have to use your phone you can use this app to control a laptops webcam or another device camera with the use of livestream. 

The app includes disguise mode and touch screen locking so your phone won't be detected, advanced settings to tweak performance and timings, ability to choose between the front and back cameras, choice of video and photo resolutions including resolutions photos and high def videos, quick start mode and more. 

Pro version is $4.49, and there is a Demo version so you can see how it works before buying. (more

Why do I mention it?
So you will know what you're up against.

Not to be left out, tiny Malta has its own spy scandal...

Malta  ...Home Affairs Minister Manuel Mallia was “caught eavesdropping” on an opposition meeting.

Reliable sources told this paper that Dr Mallia was last week caught “with his ears to the Opposition Parliament office” as a meeting was going on inside. At the time a meeting of the Opposition’s Committee for the South was being held. Chairman Stephen Spiteri and MPs Carm Mifsud Bonnici, Mario Galea, Jason Azzopardi and Anthony Bezzina were present.

The sources said that Dr Mallia was seen eavesdropping by another person, who is not a politician. (more)

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Proof Spying is Mainstream - The Walmart of India has a Spy Section

India - Naaptol with its “shop right, shop more” slogan has just announced its own list of the top 10 spy gadgets of 2014. And it’s just the start of the year! 

They come in all shapes and sizes. Spy gadgets camouflaged as pens (Rs 2999 for 4 GB); sim card phone device ear bugs; and even cloth hooks spy cameras. 

If that’s not enough, check out the video recording button camera. No one might suspect that it’s not part of your suit! You have an option of hidden cameras that fit in a car key-chain, the world’s smallest digital mini camera that is slightly bigger than your eye, motion sensor padlocks, anti-theft whistle key-chains, wall clocks that hide a CCTV camera, mini USB-shaped reader digital camera flash drive. (more) (store)

Spy ‘Numbers Stations’ Still Baffle, Enthrall

In the early 1990s, at the end of the Cold War, before the onset of the Internet Age, 
Courtesy, SpyArtStudios
you could tune across the shortwave bands and hear the monotonous drone of an automated woman’s voice calling out long strings of numbers in Spanish. “Siete — Quatro — Cinqo — Cinqo — Cinqo,” the voice would say, pause, and then switch to a new set of numbers. The Spanish-language female voice station became known as “Attenćion,” due to its repeated use of that phrase at the beginning of each transmission.

These transmissions, which had started at the end of the Second World War, weren’t always in Spanish, nor were they always female. Other languages were used to broadcast entire strings of numbers, which many believed made up a coded message that could be heard by anyone with a shortwave radio. The consensus view at the time was they were meant for secret agents operating in foreign countries...

Today, with the Internet Age fully mature and the Cold War buried under 20 years of modern history, the numbers are still being transmitted. (more)

Surreptitous Workplace Recording - IT Guy Receives Sentence

PA - The Easton Area School District's former technology director has entered a first-time offenders program after being accused of illegally recording a private meeting.

That's according to the Morning Call, which says Thomas Drago's record will be expunged following a year on probation and a psychiatric evaluation.

Drago, 54, of Bushkill Township, resigned from his post in late 2012, just before the district began investigating whether he had been spying on his colleagues.

Police say investigators eventually learned Drago had used his iPhone to audio tape an "Act 93" meeting in March 2012. He was charged in August of last year with one count of felony wiretapping. (more)


Security Directors: FREE Security White Paper - "Surreptitious Workplace Recording ...and what you can do about it."   

Sunday, January 26, 2014

How to Stop Websites from Eavesdropping Via Google Chrome

...review the sites you've allowed to access your microphone and camera in Chrome.

1. Open Chrome, and type chrome://settings/contentExceptions#media-stream into the Omnibar.
 

2. You'll see the Media Exceptions screen, where you can see which host names have permissions to your microphone and camera, and which of those two each site has access to.
 

3. Highlight any site you want to remove, and click the "x" on the right side of the line.
 

4. Save your changed by clicking Done.

PCWorld also notes that if you prefer, you can just go to: chrome://settings/content Scroll down to Media, and instead of "Ask me when a site wants to use a plug-in to access my camera and microphone" (which is the default setting), select "Do not allow any sites to access my camera and microphone," which is kind of the nuclear option. 

Doing this will also disable features like Google's Conversational Search, which can be pretty useful, likely break any voice integration with Google Now (which will arrive in Chrome any day now), and disable any other voice-activated features in Chrome or elsewhere on the web. (more) (background)

800+ Detained in China for Illegal Surveillance

Chinese police have arrested over 800 people suspected of producing, selling and using illegal wiretapping and photography equipment to conduct surveillance.

Through joint efforts by police from 14 provincial regions, 13 production facilities have been destroyed and 67 groups associated with illegal wiretapping equipment have been uncovered in the action, the Ministry of Public Security said. 

The police have uncovered over 1,550 criminal cases involving the use of wiretapping equipment in blackmail, kidnapping, illegal detention and other crimes. Over 15,000 sets of equipment for covert tracking, positioning, photographing and recording have been confiscated, state-run Xinhua news agency reported today. (more) (sing-a-long)