Mac Theft Recovery Software Tracks Thieves
Dubpal writes "Apple Macintosh users can now fit their machines with theft protection software that reports back on what a thief is doing with their computer, should it ever be stolen. The software, named "Undercover" allows users to report their Macs as stolen, causing the software to report back with IPs, screenshots and even a picture of the thief and his surroundings. In addition to this, Undercover begins faking hardware faults, displaying messages and even reading them aloud, alerting anyone around that the Mac's been stolen."
In other words, this piece of software is useful only to:Oh, and anyone tempted to quote the following from the faq at me:1) Bypassing the firmware is also trivial on Apple machines - all you have to do is add some Ram, and boot
2) Noone has a firmware bios password.
Oh, and last thing - again from the FAQBullshit. If they could do that, they would be selling that, not their little toy spyware app.
There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
reading them aloud, alerting anyone around that the Mac's been stolen
Sounds like a guaranteed way to get your stolen mac smashed into unuseable pieces.
Sending you screenshots of the laptop being used is very useful, most security software "phones home" but only gives limited information, like the IP address of the machine (public IP if it is NATed).
The stolen laptops that law enforcement have contacted me about, have been largely pointless (as I work for an ISP and have access to the customer records). The perpetraitor or possesor of stolen goods is almost always at a hotel (wifi hotspot - what have you). Under US law - John Doe search warrant of a hotel isn't good enough.
You can't wake everyone in a hotel up and search thier rooms, the police need a specific name and room number, they can only search one room.
So thus screen shots, and knowing the identity of the person who's using their stolen laptop, improves your chances of recovery immensely.
___________________________
I'm not a geek, but I play one on TV.
I administer a network of over 8000 computers, half of which are Apple computers. We use a program from http://www.absolute.com/ called Computrace (Win/Mac) and it writes a piece to the BIOS that calls home REGARDLESS of OS reinstall. If removed, it will reinstall the software to call back home. Can it be stopped? Yes, but only with packet captures and other assorted goodies. Works really slick and it has been tested.