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Sunday, April 30

We're too late...
by
Xavier Ashe
on Sun 30 Apr 2006 04:11 PM EDT
A new law in Georgia on private investigators now extends to computer forensics and computer incident response, meaning that forensics experts who testify in court without a PI license may be committing a felony.
In the U.S. television show "Medium,"
Patricia Arquette's character uses her "special psychic skills" to help
solve crimes. If a new law passed by the Georgia legislature but not
yet signed by the Governor goes into effect, not only could Miss
Arquette's character face legal troubles, but thousands of computer
security consultants would face the very real threat of jail time -
simply for plying their trade. ... According to the legislature, a Private Investigator
is any person who is in the business of obtaining or furnishing, or
accepting employment to obtain or to furnish, information with
reference to:
(A) Crimes or wrongs done or threatened against the United States of America or any state or territory thereof;
(B) The background, identity, habits, conduct, business, employment,
occupation, assets, honesty, integrity, credibility, knowledge,
trustworthiness, efficiency, loyalty, activity, movement, whereabouts,
affiliations, associations, transactions, acts, reputation, or
character of any person;
(C) The location, disposition, or recovery of lost or stolen property;
(D) The cause or responsibility for fires, libels, losses, accidents, damage, or injury to persons or property;
(E) The securing of evidence in the course of the private detective
business to be used before any court, board, officer, or investigating
committee; or
(F) The protection of individuals from serious bodily harm or death.
In addition to the aforementioned services, "private detective
business"" shall also mean providing, or accepting employment to
provide, protection of persons from death or serious bodily harm."
Typical "Magnum PI" kind of stuff. The problem is that the statute is
written so broadly as to include almost all types of computer forensics
and computer incident response – at least when done by outside
consultants. After all, when do you need computer forensics, or
incident response? Typically, you call in a computer forensics expert
when you suspect something "bad" has happened. Thus, you retain the
expert to furnish information with respect to possible crimes or wrongs
(the phrase against the United States or any State or territory doesn't
mean that the State is the victim of the crime, just that it violates
the state law.)
You also retain forensic experts to collect evidence about damages and
loss to you – from computer viruses, worms, attacks, and so on. You
want to know what happened, how it happened, why it happened, and how
to prevent it from happening again. You want to know the, "cause and
responsibility for ... losses and damage to ... property." Namely, this
applies to your computer network and the information contained in it.
You also want the information collected in a way so that it can be used
in court or by other investigators later on, even if you do not intend
to pursue a civil or criminal case. If information is stolen, you want
to know the "location, disposition and [ensure the] recovery of lost or
stolen property" namely the intellectual property stored on the
computer. For all of these things, you would typically hire not a
gumshoe, but a forensic expert. Unfortunately, under this new law that
forensic expert would be committing a felony.
Complete coverage on Security Focus.
Friday, April 28

Registry Key to disable USB Storage devices
by
Xavier Ashe
on Fri 28 Apr 2006 07:45 PM EDT
Once in a while I have a friend, or customer that needs to keep people from using the USB ports to copy data off of a system.
It is easy to lock a machine down, disable the floppy, and cdrom in the bios. Many times when you try to disable USB - it disables it entirely. This can be a real pain on newer laptops or systems that don't even have a PS2 interface for the mouse or keyboard.
There is a simple registry change that will keep the USB storage drivers from starting when the system boots. Keeps people from walking up to a PC and copying data off with a USB key, but allows you to keep your scanner, keyboard, and mouse working.
As always - back your system up before messing around in the registry. Just open regedit and browse to this key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\UsbStor
Notice the value 'Start' Switch this value to 4, and USB storage devices are disabled. Switch this value to 3, and USB storage devices are enabled.
From IntelliAdmin, who also has a little util for those scared of regedit. I believe this is much more effective than the Group Policy I posted about.
Wednesday, April 26

Remove the 100 song cap on your iTunes phone
by
Xavier Ashe
on Wed 26 Apr 2006 10:12 PM EDT
If you are one of the few to have an iTunes Music Phone (ROKR, SLVR) it is more then frustrating to have a 100 song limit on the phone. What is with THAT restriction? A patch was developed to remove that 100 song cap, and make the new limit 1000 songs. Now if they could only find a way to make the USB 1.0 port a USB 2.0 port we are good to go!
Of course it goes without saying that this hack, along with any other is not supported by Motorola, and has the potential for bad mojo on your phone. Although I have found no reports of any problems, it is important to be aware of this fact. With that said, lets blast the 100 song cap off of this phone.
Get the Hack over on UNEASYsilence.
Saturday, April 22

Blingo on
by
Xavier Ashe
on Sat 22 Apr 2006 09:00 AM EDT
Do you have a mobile phone with web browsing capability? Now you can use Blingo even when you're on the go.
Need to look up an address? Want to check the weather? Wondering
whether your local malt shop is open for a quick after-dinner dessert?
Find their web site using Blingo!
Just point your phone's web browser at mobile.blingo.com and you'll
have the full power of Blingo Web Search in the palm of your hand.
We know what you're wondering, and the answer is yes, you can win a prize even when you use Blingo from your phone. Nice... I use my Blackberry on a daily basis. Join Blingo today and win prizes while you get google search results. I am up to two free movie tickets.
Thursday, April 20

The Evolution Of Spy Tools
by
Xavier Ashe
on Thu 20 Apr 2006 12:10 PM EDT
Real spies may tell you that their lives are nothing like what you’d
see in a Hollywood movie, but don’t be fooled: They’ve still got some
pretty cool gadgets. And aside from the relatively recent tools
that monitor electronic correspondence, most of those gizmos have been
around for a pretty long time. Spies claim that theirs is the
second-oldest profession, and basic espionage needs haven’t changed:
looking and listening, getting the information they need, and smuggling
it back home. What has changed is the way those spy gadgets work.
As technology advances and enemies get smarter, spies have had to
constantly re-invent the tools of their trade. Neet article on Forbes.com.
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