Posts Tagged ‘Spy’

Spy Smartphone Software Tracks ‘Every Move’

October 31st, 2011

As marketing pitches you don’t get much lower: “Track every text, every call and every move your spouse makes…”

Yes, software manufacturers have harnessed the green-eyed monster.

“A cell phone plays a role in almost every affair,” said one producer of mobile phone spyware.

Another spelled it out: “When you begin to notice signs of a cheating spouse, the best way to catch that cheat is to spy on his or her cell phone using spy software.
“Such software is required because the cell phone has become the modern day keeper of secrets and its uses are as versatile and diverse as their makes and models.”
But it is not just for jealous partners.

There is no way that a victim would know his phone had been comprehensively hacked.

Jason Hart, cyber security expert

Software designed to completely mine every secret on a smartphone can track its users, record their calls, copy their emails, read their text messages and bug the rooms the phones are sitting in.

Jason Hart, a cyber security expert with Cryptocard, explained how easy it is to turn a mobile phone into a pocket spy.
It starts with a little ’social engineering’.

By hacking the phone of someone the victim might trust, and learning something about them from reading their Tweets and Facebook page, the attacker will send a personalised email from a known account.

The user opens an email and a document, a picture, letter or pdf file.

A programme can be embedded in the attached document which takes the hacked user’s phone off to a secret website site which covertly downloads spying software onto the smartphone.

Shortened weblinks are also a risk.

“Using Facebook and Twitter (and) getting an individual to click on a shortened link would actually take them to a website and automatically install malware,” said Mr Hart.

“There is no way that a victim would know his phone had been comprehensively hacked.”

Spyware ‘can covertly operate all of a smartphone’s functions from afar’

Attacks on smartphones shot up by 46% last year, and this year the percentage is likely to be in the thousands.

We loaded the commercial software onto my phone and very quickly Mr Hart was watching my emails come through.

The vendors of the software promised that he would be able to intercept and listen to my calls – we could not get that to work. But, as a bug, my phone was close to perfect.

The software meant Mr Hart could dial into my phone and it would secretly answer – broadcasting any conversation I was having near the handset back to him.
“Once a criminal or spy has got hold of software like this and loaded it onto your phone, there is very little indeed that you will be able to do either to detect or, or defend yourself. This is a total compromise,” Mr Hart said.

Spyware can covertly operate all of a smartphone’s functions from afar, turning it on and off, and stealing its secret contents.
Almost 500,000 new smartphones will be sold this year around the world.

Malware developers are running ahead of the industry’s ability to develop tools which, in any case, would inevitably restrict how useful smartphones can be to a customer.

But, as losses to intellectual property theft are estimated to cost the UK £17bn a year, it is clear companies will be demanding an air gap between smartphones used for business – and smartphones used for everything else.

So, for the skiving worker, the truant teenager and the faithless spouse, there can only be a few words of advice – that phone isn’t smart, it’s a sneak.

Source:http://news.sky.com/home/technology/article/16099260

UK firm denies ‘cyber-spy’ deal with Egypt

September 21st, 2011

A UK firm offered to supply “cyber-spy” software used by Egypt to target activists, the BBC has learned.

Documents found in the headquarters of the country’s security service suggest it was used for a five-month trial period at the end of last year.

Hampshire-based Gamma International UK denies actually supplying the program, which infects computers with a virus that bugs online voice calls and email.

The foreign secretary says he will “critically” examine export controls.

William Hague, who speaks for the government on computer security issues, said: “Any export of goods that could be used for internal repression is something we would want to stop.”

He also admitted the law governing software exports was a grey area.

Egyptians searched through secret police files after storming the building
The documents seen by the BBC were found at the looted headquarters of the Egyptian state security building earlier this year.

They describe an offer by Gamma International UK Ltd to supply a software programme called Finfisher.

Finfisher is described as a toolkit “used by many global security and intelligence services” for secretly gaining access to people’s computers.

The files from the Egyptian secret police’s Electronic Penetration Division described Gamma’s product as “the only security system in the world” capable of bugging Skype phone conversations on the internet.

They detail a five-month trial by the Egyptian secret police which found the product had “proved to be an efficient electronic system for penetrating secure systems [which] accesses email boxes of Hotmail, Yahoo and Gmail networks”.

Another document discovered by German public television network MDR is thought to reveal the first-known victims of the Finfisher program.

The document describes how, during the period of the software trial, the secret police successfully broke into and recorded encrypted Skype calls.

Sherif Mansour, from the US democracy group Freedom House, was in Egypt last year to help monitor parliamentary elections.

‘Outsourcing repression’
Named in the document as a victim of the bugging, he blamed the Finfisher software and urged the British government to take action.

“We democracy and human rights activists already face a lot of troubles and get a lot of threats. I expect that from government but not from software companies.

“We have never looked to them to [be] enabling repression, to outsourcing repression.”

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It was amazing when they showed me some text messages from my phone and told me about my calls”

Abdul Ghani al-Khanjar
Bahrain activist
According to the Department for Business Innovation and Skills, Finfisher does not require an export licence because it does not use encryption.

Mr Hague told File on 4 that the UK had a strong export licence system.

He said a number of licences had been withdrawn from companies exporting items of concern to Libya, Tunisia and Bahrain – but he conceded software was a difficult product to legislate for.

“This will be a greyer area because there can be many many uses for a given piece of software.

“But nevertheless, we will look at that critically and if any evidence is supplied to the government – or we come across any evidence of British technology used for internal repression in other countries – then we will take the same very tough line on that as we do on other items.”

Gamma International UK Ltd is owned by a 49-year-old Briton, Louthean Nelson, who is listed as having addresses in Salisbury, Hamburg and Beirut.

The BBC wanted to ask Mr Nelson about the contradiction between Gamma’s claim it did not supply the software, and the information contained in the Egyptian documents. He did not reply.

‘Abuse of technology’
But although Gamma has refused to comment publicly, a company representative called Martin Muench is due to speak next week at a conference in Berlin on cyber warfare.

Gamma is listed as a “sponsor and exhibitor” with a speaker due to address the conference on “applied hacking techniques used by governmental agencies”.

Also speaking at the conference are colonels from the British, US and German armies, and the director of intelligence at US Cybercommand.

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Elsewhere in the Middle East, reports emerged this month of claims that French and South African firms helped monitor phones and the internet for Libya’s Col Muammar Gaddafi.

In Bahrain – where the regime has so far survived the protests – human rights activist Abdul Ghani al-Khanjar says he only learned the extent of surveillance in his country after being arrested.

He had just returned from London where he spoke at a meeting in the House of Lords.

“Within two days, masked civilians and riot police raided my house and arrested me and I have been tortured about my many activities,” he told the BBC.

“It was amazing when they showed me some text messages from my phone and told me about my calls.”

He added: “This is a bad abuse of technology.”

The Bahraini government says it has launched an inquiry into torture allegations. But Siemens and Nokia have both been implicated in the bad publicity surrounding the case.

In the past Siemens sold Bahrain a “monitoring centre”, which is thought to have allowed the regime to secretly track and bug its citizens’ phones. The company is said to have sold the same system to 60 countries worldwide.

But Ben Roome, a spokesman for Nokia Siemens Networks – a joint venture between the two companies, says it has now pulled out of making interception tools, precisely because of concerns that they can be abused.

“If you provide technology you cannot be blind to how potentially it can be used,” he said.

Source:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-14981672

Computer Tech Installed Spy Software On LA Women’s Macs

June 9th, 2011

A Los Angeles technician has been caught installing spy software on his clients’ Macs allowing him to take candid pictures of them.

The man in question, Trevor Harwell, works with the local home computer repairing firm Rezitech. According to police reports, that’s how he got access to his victims’ computers.

Apparently, the 20 years old technician, also a former student of the Biola University, was assigned to multiple Mac repair and servicing projects throughout Los Angeles and Orange County, and he used those jobs as opportunities to illegally install the software.

A spokesperson from the Fullerton Police Department shed more light onto the matter by saying, “It would let his server know that the victim’s machine was on. The server would then notify his smartphone… and then the images were recorded on his home computer,” Computer World reports.

The matter was first noticed by a Apple Genius Bar employee, who advised a former client of Harwell’s to contact police following the discovery of suspicious elements in her Mac.

People’s webcams have been used to take pictures without their consent in numerous prior incidents involving anyone from high school students with school laptops to the Dalai Lama.
Neither Harwell nor his firm Rezitech could be reached for comment.

Source:http://www.itproportal.com/2011/06/09/computer-tech-installed-spy-software-la-womens-macs/

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