tagged w/ Spying
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The U.S. Department of Justice sent a formal request to independent news site Indymedia, ordering it to provide details of all reader visits on a certain day. The order included IP addresses, times, and identifying information including e-mail addresses, physical addresses, registered accounts, and Indymedia readers' Social Security Numbers, bank account numbers, and credit card numbers.The U.S. Department of Justice sent a formal request to independent news site... more
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Every phone call, text message, email and website visit made by british citizens is to be stored for a year - and made available to 653 public bodies
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/politics/lawandorder/6
534319/State-to-spy-on-every-phone-call-email-and-web-search.htmlEvery phone call, text message, email and website visit made by british citizens is to... more
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If you like to listen-in on convos occurring in the other room, you might want to purchase
this listening device.
The electronic internal sound amplifier of the device boosts the sound quality, meaning you will be able to translate what's being said clearly. The usual regular surfaces can be heard through, along with steel plates.
This will cost you $62.99 (£42).
http://www.ohgizmo.com/2009/11/05/next-room-eavesdropping-device/If you like to listen-in on convos occurring in the other room, you might want to... more
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A scientist who worked for the Defense Department, a White House space council and other agencies was arrested Monday on charges of attempting to pass along classified information to an FBI agent posing as an Israeli intelligence officer.A scientist who worked for the Defense Department, a White House space council and... more
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Mike is suspicious of Stefan stealing money and post-its from his desk. So Mike setup a camera to catch him in the act.Mike is suspicious of Stefan stealing money and post-its from his desk. So Mike setup... more
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Spycam's are still big business and as camera's get smaller and smarter it seems people are finding even more incredible places to hide them:
"Smaller than a USB drive, the USB-compatible Spycam Car Key Fob Camera from ThinkGeek "not only allows easy video filming, but it gives you the ability to do it in a covert manner."
This tiny camera is shaped like a generic car key remote fob and captures excellent quality video (at 640x480 resolution)."
It's just so damn small its unrealSpycam's are still big business and as camera's get smaller and smarter it... more
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JClem
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added this
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2 years ago
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In this day and age, most large companies monitor your tweets, email, IM and voip messages, sent from their network, for insurance and HR reasons. This surveillance typically includes employee information on public profiles and social networks. This is legal in most states and rarely mentioned in employee manuals or other company documentation.
And now, this cell phone application monitors photos of the workplace, keystroke events, when workers are checking in and out, latest work memos and their billing status (profitability).
I know, few people have anything to hide, however... I think this is an issue about privacy and how new technology used by corporations is affecting it.
By the way, the company who made this application is backed by Benchmark Capital to the tune of $29 million. They also back Twitter, AOL, Linden Lab, Yelp, Ebay, Art.com & Mint, Among others.In this day and age, most large companies monitor your tweets, email, IM and voip... more
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Robert Lee Taylor is a College English (4.0) Honor Student who grew up on the gang ridden streets of the West Coast of the United States. He has since moved to Northern Virginia, is the Director of Research for the Youth Foreign Languages Organization based in the Langley suburb of McLean and has worked for the U.S. Government in Intelligence Operations a few blocks from the White House in Washington D.C. Instrumental by Emotion-LRobert Lee Taylor is a College English (4.0) Honor Student who grew up on the gang... more
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If your into spying, why not purchase the Wireless Shoe Covert Camera. This 2.4GHz device is located in a shoe and transmits a signal to a 3" GSM mobile phone, recording the images. The phone has a storage capacity of 1Gb and can receive signals from 50 metres away.
The price tag is set at US$329.If your into spying, why not purchase the Wireless Shoe Covert Camera. This 2.4GHz... more
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Former FBI Language Specialist Sibel Edmonds finally gets to testify under oath, after being hit with a gag order.
Bombshells Under Oath: INCLUDE: CONGRESS MEMBERS NAMED IN ESPIONAGE, BRIBERY, SEXUAL BLACKMAIL SCHEMES; NEW BREWSTER JENNINGS / VALERIE PLAME DISCLOSURE...
Long gagged under the "state secrets" privilege by the Bush Administration, the Obama Administration's DoJ chose not to re-invoke privilege, paving the way for this information to finally make its way on to the unclassified public record.
LINK TO ARTICLE: http://www.bradblog.com/?p=7348.
Former FBI Language Specialist Sibel Edmonds finally gets to testify under oath,... more
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Burn Notice (USA Thursdays 9)
- Action/Drama with comedic elements about a Spy black listed and trying to get his job back. This has it all: random shots of half naked women, explosions, gun fire, fighting, cons and did I mention chicks in bikinis? The only problem is they show half the season this summer and finish it in the winter... such suspense...
http://www.usanetwork.com/series/burnnotice/
Man Vs. Food (Travel Channel Wednesday 10)
- How can you resist some guy going to all the nation's greatest pig out joints? Behinds the scenes in the kitchens and taking on all the food challenges from coast to coast...
http://www.travelchannel.com/TV_Shows/Man_v_Food
Deadliest Warrior (Spike TV Seconds Season Time and Date TBA)
- Different Warriors from different time periods pitted head to head against each other. Their best weapons and fighting techniques are "calculated." You'll see how wins the most fights out of 1000 to determine the winner. Yes I know this show was made fun of on Current already but you just can't say no to all that violence and still call yourself a man can you?
http://www.spike.com/show/31082
Battles BC (History Channel New Season TBA)
- History's greatest battles explain and shown in a variety of ways... Strategies, Heroes, Legends are talked about while Truth and Myth go head to head... Its even got the narrator from 300 lol
http://www.history.com/content/battles-bc
Warriors (History Channel New Season TBA)
- Special Forces Operative travels around the globe and often seemingly back in time learning and showing warrior cultures throughout history... fighting techniques, history, glorious battles and their heroes and the culture that glued them all together....
http://www.history.com/content/warriors
These are guy shows at their best. Often educational, nothing fancy, pretty violent. If you want sex go rent porn.Burn Notice (USA Thursdays 9)
- Action/Drama with comedic elements about a Spy black... more
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Brett found an old instructional video that was meant for new Secret Agents.
The Rotten Tomatoes Show is a movie review show that airs on Thursday nights at 10:30 e/p on Current TV. From reviews of the newest releases to commentary on cult favorites and movie trends, each episode of The Rotten Tomatoes Show is a fast-paced, comedic journey through the week in cinema.
For more from the Rotten Tomatoes Show: http://rottentomatoesshow.com
For more about movies from Current: http://current.com/moviesBrett found an old instructional video that was meant for new Secret Agents.
The... more
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What did you do for AT&T? How long did you work there?
I worked at AT&T for 22 and a half years. My job was basically to keep the systems going. They were computer systems, network communication systems, Internet equipment, Voice over Internet [Protocol (VoIP)] equipment. I tested circuits long distance across the country. That was my job: to keep the network up. ...
So you handled the hottest high-tech stuff that AT&T had.
That's right. Our job was to keep everything up and running smoothly.
What goes on inside the building on Folsom Street [in San Francisco]?
While I was there we worked on three floors which belonged to AT&T. The sixth floor was the traditional phone switch, ... which handled the public's telephone calls and was the workhorse of the phone system. The seventh floor was where the Internet room was, and that's where I spent a lot of my time. That's where there are a lot of Cisco routers, a lot of fiber-optic lines coming in and going out. The eighth floor is more diversified, more routers and other kinds of equipment, what's called multiplex equipment and various kinds of telecommunications equipment.
So this is an operations center. Are we talking about serving San Francisco? Are we talking about serving the state of California? Are we talking about America and Asia? What's the traffic that's going through there?
Well, this is an important hub for the Bay Area in terms of if you're talking about Internet. There's lots of Internet traffic, as you can imagine, that goes in and out of this office, probably hundreds of fiber-optic lines that go out, carrying billions -- that's billions with a "B" -- billions of bits of data going in and out every second every day. So all the Web surfing you're doing, whatever you're doing on the Internet -- the pictures, the video, the Voice over Internet -- all that stuff's going in and out of there.
And then of course there's also the traditional phone switch, which is doing what it's been doing since before the Internet.
Handling millions of calls. ...
Handling millions and millions of phone calls, right. That's its job.
So this is a big hub.
It's a big hub, yes.
Take me back to the summer of 2002. What happens? ...
... In 2002 I was sitting at my workstation one day, and some e-mail came in. I opened it up, and it was just a notice saying that somebody from the National Security Agency, NSA, was going to come visit for some business. They didn't say what, of course, just letting us know. I was also told the same thing by the manager of the office.
Don Henry?
Don Henry, who mentioned that there was going to be a visit from this person from the National Security Agency. ... That struck me as a little odd to begin with, because I remember from back in the '70s, the NSA is not supposed to be doing domestic spying, so what were they doing in an AT&T company office? It struck me as odd, but I didn't know anything more about it, so I just let it lie and waited for the guy to come.
Sometime later, maybe a few weeks -- I don't remember exactly -- he did show up. This NSA representative showed up at the door. I happened to be the one who opened the door. I let him in. I directed him to the appropriate people. He was very closemouthed and unsmiling, and he did his business. ... I didn't hear anything about it for a while, and I thought, well, that was over and I'll probably never hear anything about it again. So I never kept the e-mail. I thought it was just routine e-mail, and I'd never hear about it again. That whole incident probably took place in, I think it was the summer of 2002.
[more at link]What did you do for AT&T? How long did you work there?
I worked at AT&T for... more
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asherp
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added this
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2 years ago
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Flawed US plans were rubberstamped by Blair. Brown blocked vital funding for five months.
A secret report by Army bosses to be presented to the Iraq war inquiry blames Tony Blair and Gordon Brown for the botched occupation of the country.
The dossier - prepared for ex-military chief General Sir Mike Jackson - criticises then Chancellor Mr Brown for withholding funds to rebuild Basra for FIVE months after our troops went in. And the 100-page document attacks Mr Blair for "uncritically" accepting flawed US plans for the March 2003 invasion, which led to tens of thousands of deaths, including those of 179 British troops.
The report - Stability Operations in Iraq - will not be officially made public because the inquiry's head, Sir John Chilcot, ruled all documents will remain secret.
But the contents have been leaked to the Sunday Mirror.
We can reveal that a lack of cash for the operation meant British troops sent to fight in Iraq:
Used mobile phones to communicate in combat because radios did not work.
Were forced to leave wounded soldiers on the battlefield for an average of two-and-half hours before getting them to a field hospital.Flawed US plans were rubberstamped by Blair. Brown blocked vital funding for five... more
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History repeats itself. In the early fifties it happened before......when Prime Minister Mossadeq got wind of their planned coup, he threw out all the British Embassy staff leaving them with no agents in Iran to carry out the coup. In that time they approached the American who carried out the coup in return for 40% of the oil revenue...............and that is how Americans became involved in OIL in Iran.
It has happed again .....Iranian security officials have arrested eight local staff members of the British embassy for inflaming post-election tensions in the country.History repeats itself. In the early fifties it happened before......when Prime... more
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No, not me! Someone posted this to nerve.com's dating confessions and I HAD to share it.
"My neighbors have sex with the curtains open and the lights on so I watch. It (always) goes like this: 6 minutes in the missionary position. At about minute 5 he grabs a page of the NYTimes and holds it ready. At the last second he pulls out and cums into the paper. He gets up and hobbles out of view with his junk wrapped in newsprint. Then she gets up and checks her email in the nude."
I'm not sure what's worse... cumming in the classifieds or the voyeuristic neighbour!No, not me! Someone posted this to nerve.com's dating confessions and I HAD to... more
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Exposing people has now been made easier, with the introduction for the CATS.i tracking device.
The CATS.i -- which has measurements 45mm x 35mm x 12mm -- uses a built-in GSM sim chip to report back its GPS data,continuosly or in set intervals. This data can then be tracked online to keep a close watch on pets, cars and people, all in a hgihgly discreet manner.
The power source for the CATS.i comes from a battery, however it can be hardwired to vehicles and during the night uses solar power.Exposing people has now been made easier, with the introduction for the CATS.i... more
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Laid off from Wall Street? The CIA wants you -- as long as you can pass a lie detector test and show that you are motivated by service to your country rather than your wallet.
The Central Intelligence Agency has been advertising for recruits and will be holding interviews on June 22 at a secret location in New York.
"Economics, finance and business professionals, if the quest for the bottom line is just not enough for you, the Central Intelligence Agency has a mission like no other," one radio advertisement for the agency says.
"Join CIA's directorate of intelligence and be a part of our global mission as an economic or financial analyst. Make a difference in your career and for your nation," it says.
Ron Patrick, a spokesman for recruitment and retention at the CIA, told Reuters Television the agency had received several hundred resumes so far from applicants ranging from people just out of graduate school to laid-off bankers.
"It's going to be a very different use of their skill set than perhaps they've used on Wall Street," Patrick said.Laid off from Wall Street? The CIA wants you -- as long as you can pass a lie detector... more
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New miniature camera technology may be about to give the US military's insect-sized surveillance drones a new way of seeing the world that's more energy-conscious than before. Yay, technology?
New Scientist reports that a new microchip-sized digital camera, developed by the California Institute of Technology using funding from NASA and the Pentagon, has been patented and is expected to replace current camera technology on the tiny spy drones.New miniature camera technology may be about to give the US military's... more
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