Triin Põldra, 2012/04/08
USA politsei uued ja huvitavad mänguasjad
On saanud teatavaks, et Michigani osariigi politsei on mõnda aega juba kasutanud kõrgtehnoloogilist seadet, mille abil saab ekstraheerida informatsiooni rohkem kui 3000 mobiiltelefoni mudelist, võimalik on kogu sinu iPhone sisu kahe minutiga ümber kopeerida.
Cellebrite UFED on pihku mahtuv seadeldis, mida Michigani politseinikud on 2008. aasta augustist kasutanud selleks, et kopeerida pisirikkumiste eest kinni peetud sõidukijuhtide mobiiltelefonide sisu. Seadeldis suudab ringi minna salasõna-nõudest ja alla laadida mobiiltelefonis olemasolevat, peidetud ja ka kustutatud andmeid, sh. kõnelogi, smsid, kontaktid, pildid ja geoinfosilte............
Täispikk artikkel siin: http://kogukond.org/2012/04/in...
Viimased kommentaarid
Kommentaarid on kirjutatud EWR lugejate poolt. Nende sisu ei pruugi ühtida EWR toimetuse seisukohtadega.
Lugeja30 May 2012 16:15
Ilmselt mängivad tootjad (Apple) ja USA julgeolekuteenistused kokku. Asjad saaks ju programmeerida nõnda et dekodeerimeine äärmiselt raske oleks. Muidugi, teades et sellised asjad toimuvad, tõelised kurjategijad kasutavad vastumeetmeid. See on ju hea ainult väikese inimese terroriseerimiseks politsei poolt. Rokem nagu politsei aja raiskamine tühjade asjade peale. Iformatsioon on hea, kuid tohutu hulk kasutut informatsiooni on müra.
obama29 May 2012 22:04
NY times reports :
US President Barack Obama has personally overseen a top-secret process for determining which Al-Qaeda suspects should be placed on a "kill list," the New York Times reported Tuesday.
The Times, citing dozens of top officials and former advisers, said the administration had developed what it termed the "kill list" as part of a stepped-up drone war against Al-Qaeda and its affiliates in Pakistan and Yemen.
"He is determined that he will make these decisions about how far and wide these operations will go," it quoted National Security Adviser Thomas Donilon as saying.
"His view is that he's responsible for the position of the United States in the world... He's determined to keep the tether pretty short."
The Times described the top-secret process, which begins with some 100 counter-terrorism officials sifting through biographies and "nominating" suspects in Yemen and Somalia to be added to the kill list during a secure video conference run by the Pentagon.
The CIA carries out a separate process for suspects in Pakistan, it said.
The nominations then go to Obama, who signs off on every strike in Yemen and Somalia and also on especially complex and risky strikes in Pakistan -- about a third of the total, the Times said.
Obama personally approves the killing of top suspects, such as Qaeda preacher Anwar al-Awlaqi -- a US citizen -- who was killed by a US drone strike in Yemen last year.
The Times quoted former White House chief of staff William Daley as saying that Obama called the decision to strike Awlaqi "an easy one," but Daley said some officials had expressed some qualms about the kill list.
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