Saturday 18 July 2009

Chateau Pétrus, Lafite-Rothschild and what you need to know about your alarm system vulnerabilities

A French wine thief has been caught during his second robbery on top Paris restaurants wine cellars.

Our interest in this story was almost lost in the copy but there is a very important bit on information for many people.

"Police found gloves and mobile telephone scramblers used to disable the restaurant's alarm systems."

"mobile telephone scramblers"... these are better known as jammers. Basically a small hand-held device that transmits radio noise on cellular frequencies causing the phones to drop to 'no service'. Why is this important, well an increasing number of our alarm systems are using GSM as a back-up to alert the police of an alarm (indeed a number of them advertise 'GSM protected' on their front panel!).

We have been advising our customers for a long time that this is a very poor method of alarm backup as it can be defeated by a £50 jammer which are freely available, although almost certainly illegal to turn on (info here, here, and here ).

I wonder when the alarm companies will take this seriously and stop just pushing product?

If you are concerned about asset protection be sure to engage a specialist independent audit of your systems and procedures.

ID's for sale - 4 million UK to the highest bidder

The Times are reporting that there is currently 4 million British ID's for sale to the highest bidder on the internet.

This problem is only going to get worse.

The best advice we can give for individuals to minimise the impact of credit-card theft is keep one credit card exclusively for use on-line. Set a low limit and monitor your statements closely.

If your business involves peoples personal data take your security seriously and contract external security experts (it is not reasonable any more to say 'I thought my IT guys took care of it'). Contact us if you need help.

Australian cops treating unprotected wifi networks as crime risks - plod-driving is born

In Queensland Australia police are hunting for unprotected wifi networks and advising owners as a crime-prevention measure.