The Khaki Bandit Strikes At IT - 130 Stolen Laptops
destinyland writes "'The khaki bandit' posed as an office worker at several corporations and successfully stole over 130 laptops which he later sold on eBay. The ease of theft from the corporate offices (including FedEx and Burger King) shows just how bad corporate security can be. In some cases, the career thief just walked into the office behind an employee with a security badge. Two million laptops were stolen just in 2004, and of those 97 percent were never recovered. Ultimately it was the corporate headquarters of Outback Steakhouse who caught the thief with a bugged laptop that notified them when he re-connected it to the internet."
...I work in a shop on occasion, and the number of stolen laptops that come through with people trying to sell them to us is simply mind-boggling. I'm not talking about pissy little Pentiums, either, these are the latest, greatest in portable number crunching. Some have passwords on them as their only real identifying feature (the serial numbers and Microsoft licenses are usually scratched off), which I tell the seller is not possible to circumvent (in some cases they're not, being on the BIOS rather than the OS). Other tricks they have is coming in claiming they've lost or wrecked the power adapter (how convenient) and need a cheapo universal one. Sure, I'll sell them the universal brick but they're not testing the thing in the store.
Net bugs are a good thing to have, I think (got one on here), particularly given the plentiful supply of open wireless points in most large cities now. Turn on machine, bug sends data burst, thief is cornered. Hell, he doesn't even need to physically connect to a network these days.
Operation Guillotine is in effect.
I believe most tracking software creates a separate partition that would survive a standard reinstall, but not a complete reformatting of the disk.
What I think would be very effective would be a laptop, created explicitly for businesses, that would implement the tracking system in hardware. If you added it to the integrated wireless networking, you wouldn't be able to shut it off, and you could track it whenever you needed to. If you are concerned about battery life, you could allow someone to shut it off, but have it wake-up every few hours just to check in. When it checks in, if it's labeled as stolen, the networking stays on, allowing for constant tracking.
There are some privacy concerns with a tracking device that can't be turned off, but that's why I said it would be explicitly for businesses, (or people who want that feature explicitly). For many businesses, the loss of privacy is less important that the ability to track their assets.
Reading code is like reading the dictionary - you have to read half of it before you can go back and understand it.
...are really not enough for security. I work at a building that I need keycard access to, but cards eventually become worn and some break so that they cannot be displayed anymore, and the company won't pay for a new one every time that happens. So there are two results: People don't wear them explicitly, and people don't question who they are letting into the front door behind them. I'm personally in favor of having a guard stationed at a single entry, at least for larger buildings; someone who can recognize people's faces and can be held responsible for stopping people he doesn't know. ...There's the danger of him being an asshole, but I'd be willing to take that chance.
We must keep paper towels out of the hands of terrorists. Even the janitor's closet has better security than most offices.
Seriously though, companies will take you to court over stealing a few hundred bucks worth of equipment but if you rob the company blind with sleazy accounting, incompetence, and outright robbery as an executive you get let go with millions in severance.
It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
Ultimately it was the corporate headquarters of Outback Steakhouse who caught the thief with a bugged laptop that notified them when he re-connected it to the internet.
Which is funny as hell, because I've read several times on Slashdot (sorry, no time to search) about people who have their laptops set to do just that, but when they inform the police that their laptop is in use by a customer of this ISP with that IP address, they're told to go pound sand, that the police don't have time to go catch criminals that you can lead them to. It's trivial--especially with MacBooks--to have it send you not only the IP address but a picture of the theif if you want--but it seems to do no good.
Maybe the thing to do would be to get laptop insurance and then have the info emailed to the insurance company.
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