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Frequently
Asked Questions |
• What's an IMEI
number?
The
GSM MoU's IMEI
(International Mobile Equipment Identity) numbering system is a 15
digit unique code that is used to identify the GSM/DCS/PCS phone to a
GSM/DCS/PCS network.
When a phone is switched on, this unique IMEI number is transmitted and
checked against a database of blacklisted or grey-listed phones in the
network's EIR (Equipment ID Register).
This EIR determines whether the phone can log onto the network to make
and receive calls.
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• How can I get
my phone's
IMEI number?
To get your phone's IMEI
number, dial *#06#.
You can also find it under the battery label. If you are using the
number located there, exclude /, -, and spaces.
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• What's
encryption?
Encryption
is the process of
obscuring information to make it unreadable without special knowledge.
While encryption has been used to protect communications for centuries,
only organizations and individuals with an extraordinary need for
secrecy had made use of it. In the mid-1970s, strong encryption emerged
from the sole preserve of secretive government agencies into the public
domain, and is now employed in protecting widely-used systems, such as
Internet e-commerce, mobile telephone networks and bank automatic
teller machines.
Encryption
can be used to
ensure secrecy, but other techniques are still needed to make
communications secure, particularly to verify the integrity and
authenticity of a message; for example, a message authentication code
(MAC) or digital signatures. Another consideration is protection
against traffic analysis.
Encryption
or software code
obfuscation is also used in software copy protection against reverse
engineering, unauthorized application analysis, cracks and software
piracy used in different encryption or obfuscating software.
(from
www.wikipedia.org)
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• What's
CSD?
Circuit
Switched Data, often
referred to as CSD, is the original form of data transmission developed
for the TDMA-based mobile phone systems like GSM. CSD uses a single
radio time slot to deliver 9.6 kbit/s data transmission to the GSM
Network and Switching Subsystem where it could be connected through the
equivalent of a normal modem to the PSTN allowing direct calls to any
dial up service.
Prior
to CSD, data
transmission over mobile phone systems was done by using a modem,
either built into the phone or attached to it. Such systems were
limited by the quality of the audio signal to 2.4 kbit/s or less. With
the introduction of digital transmission in TDMA-based systems like
GSM, CSD provided almost direct access to the underlying digital
signal, allowing for higher speeds. At the same time, the speech
oriented audio compression used in GSM actually meant that data rates
using a traditional modem connected to the phone would have been even
lower than with older analogue systems.
A
CSD call functions in a
very similar way to a normal voice call in a GSM network. A single
dedicated radio time slot is allocated between the phone and the base
station. A dedicated "sub-time slot" (16 kbit/s) is allocated from the
base station to the transcoder, and finally another time slot (64
kbit/s) is allocated from the transcoder to the Mobile Switching Centre
(MSC).
At
the MSC, it is possible to
use a modem to convert to an "analog" signal, though this will
typically actually be encoded as a digital PCM signal when sent from
the MSC. It is also possible to directly use the digital signal as an
ISDN data signal and feed it into the equivalent of a remote access
server.
GSM data transmission has
advanced since the introduction of CSD:
* HSCSD is a system based on
CSD but designed to provide higher data rates by means of more
efficient channel coding and/or multiple (up to 4) time slots.
* GPRS provides more
efficient packet-based data transmission directly from the mobile phone
at speeds similar to HSCSD.
* Finally EDGE (E-GPRS) and
UMTS provide improved radio interfaces with higher data rates, while
still being backward compatible with the GSM core network.
(from
www.wikipedia.org)
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• What type of
cellular
networks are available in the U.S.?
Within
the US, different
types of digital cellular networks abound that follow distinct
incompatible sets of standards. The two most dominant types of digital
cellular networks are known as CDMA (Code Division Multiple Access) and
GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) networks. Other common
cellular networks include TDMA (Time Division Multiple Access) and iDEN
(Integrated Digital Enhanced Network). IDEN networks use a proprietary
protocol designed by Motorola, while the others follow standardized
open protocols. A digital version of the original analog standard for
cellular telephone phone service, called D-AMPS (Digital Advanced
Mobile Phone Service), also exist.
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• Easy
installation
on
regular phones
• Absolutely no back doors - encryption
keys are randomly generated by the software and can not be provided to
any organization, private or governmental
• Certified by the Israeli
Ministry of
Defense
• Complete end to end
protection, from
phone to phone, for both audio and text messages
• Dual combination of
asymmetric and
symmetric encryption
• Automatic generation of
RSA 1024 / AES
256 encryption keys on the phone itself
• Low audio latency (low
delay)
• High audio quality
• 1024 bit RSA asymmetric
master key pairs
• AES 256 bit symmetric data
protection
algorithm implemented
• 4,096 bit Diffie-Hellman key
exchange algorithm
• 256 bit random session
key,
replaced
every second
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• What's GSM?
The
Global
System for Mobile Communications, GSM (original acronym: Groupe
Spécial Mobile) is the most popular standard for mobile
phones
in the world. GSM service is used by over 2 billion people across more
than 212 countries and territories. The ubiquity of the GSM standard
makes international roaming very common between mobile phone operators,
enabling subscribers to use their phones in many parts of the world.
GSM differs significantly from its predecessors in that both signaling
and speech channels are Digital call quality, which means that it is
considered a second generation (2G) mobile phone system. This fact has
also meant that data communication was built into the system from the
3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP).
From
the
point of view of the consumers, the key advantage of GSM systems has
been higher digital voice quality and low cost alternatives to making
calls such as text messaging. The advantage for network operators has
been the ability to deploy equipment from different vendors because the
open standard allows easy inter-operability. Like other cellular
standards GSM allows network operators to offer roaming services which
mean subscribers can use their phones all over the world.
As
the GSM
standard continued to develop, it retained backward compatibility with
the original GSM phones; for example, packet data capabilities were
added in the Release '97 version of the standard, by means of GPRS.
Higher speed data transmission has also been introduced with EDGE in
the Release '99 version of the standard.
(from
www.wikipedia.org)
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• What's
CDMA?
CDMA
refers
to a technology designed by Qualcomm in the US that utilizes spread
spectrum communications for the radio link. Rather than sharing a
channel as many other network air interfaces do, CDMA spreads the
digitized data over the entire bandwidth available, distinguishing
multiple calls through a unique sequence code assigned. Successive
versions of the IS-95 standard define CDMA usage in the US, which is
the reason why the term CDMA is often used to refer to IS-95 compliant
cellular networks. IS-95 CDMA systems are sometimes referred to as
cdmaOne. The next evolutionary step for CDMA to 3G services is
cdma2000, TIA/EIA/IS-2000 SeriesF1F, Release A, based on the ITU
IMT-2000 standard. Both Verizon and Sprint operate nationwide CDMA
networks in the US.
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• What's
WCDMA?
GSM
is a
cellular system used worldwide that was designed in Europe, primarily
by Ericsson and Nokia. Cingular and T-Mobile operate nationwide
networks in the US. GSM uses a TDMA air interface. TDMA refers to a
digital link technology whereby multiple phones share a single carrier,
radio frequency channel by taking turns – using the channel
exclusively for a certain time slice, then releasing it and waiting
briefly while other phones use it. A packet switching enhancement to
GSM wireless networks called GPRS was standardized to increase
transmission speeds of data. The next generation of GSM, commonly
referred to as the third generation or 3G, is known as UMTS (Universal
Mobile Telecommunications System) and involves enhancing GSM networks
with a Wideband CDMA (W-CDMA) air interface.
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• What's a SIM
card?
Subscriber
Identity Modules (SIMs) are synonymous with mobile phones and devices
that interoperate with GSM (Global System for Mobile communications)
cellular networks. Under the GSM framework, a cellular phone is
referred to as a Mobile Station and is partitioned into two distinct
components: the Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) and the Mobile
Equipment (ME). As the name implies, a SIM is a removable component
that contains essential information about the subscriber. The ME, the
remaining radio handset portion, cannot function fully without one. The
SIM’s main function entails authenticating the user of the
cell
phone to the network to gain access to subscribed services. The SIM
also provides storage for personal information, such as phone book
entries and text messages, as well as service-related
information.
The
SIM-ME partitioning of a
cell phone stipulated in the GSM standards has brought about a form of
portability. Moving a SIM between compatible cell phones automatically
transfers with it the subscriber’s identity and the
associated
information and capabilities. In contrast, present-day CDMA phones do
not employ a SIM. Analogous SIM functionality is instead directly
incorporated within the device. While SIMs are most widely used in GSM
systems, comparable modules are also used in iDEN (Integrated Digital
Enhanced Network) phones and UMTS user equipment (i.e., a USIM).
Because of the flexibility a SIM offers GSM phone users to port their
identity, personal information, and service between devices, eventually
all cellular phones are expected to include (U)SIM-like
capability.
At
its core,
a SIM is a special type of smart card that typically contains a
processor and between 16 to 128 KB of persistent electronically
erasable, programmable read only memory (EEPROM). It also includes
random access memory (RAM) for program execution, and read only memory
(ROM) for the operating system, user authentication and data encryption
algorithms, and other applications. The SIM’s hierarchically
organized file system resides in persistent memory and stores such
things as names and phone number entries, text messages, and network
service settings. Depending on the phone used, some information on the
SIM may coexist in the memory of the phone. Alternatively, information
may reside entirely in the memory of the phone instead of available
memory on the SIM.
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• What's
firmware?
Firmware
is a
software program or set of instructions programmed on a hardware
device. It provides the necessary instructions for how the device
communicates with the other computer hardware. But how can software be
programmed onto hardware? Good question. Firmware is typically stored
in the flash ROM of a hardware device. While ROM is "read-only memory,"
flash ROM can be erased and rewritten because it is actually a type of
flash memory.
Firmware
can
be thought of as "semi-permanent" since it remains the same unless it
is updated by a firmware updater. You may need to update the firmware
of certain devices, such as hard drives and video cards in order for
them to work with a new operating system. CD and DVD drive
manufacturers often make firmware updates available that allow the
drives to read faster media. Sometimes manufacturers release firmware
updates that simply make their devices work more efficiently.
(extracted from Sharpened
Computer Glossary)
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• What's full
duplex?
A
full-duplex
system allows communication in both directions, and unlike half-duplex,
allows this to happen simultaneously. Land-line telephone networks are
full-duplex since they allow both callers to speak and be heard at the
same time. A good analogy for a full-duplex system would be a two lane
road with one lane for each direction. Examples: Telephone, Mobile
Phone, etc.
Two
way
radios can be, for instance, designed as full-duplex systems, which
transmit on one frequency and receive on a different frequency. This is
also called frequency-division duplex. Frequency-division-duplex
systems can be extended to farther distances using pairs of simple
repeater stations, owing to the fact the communications transmitted on
any one frequency always travels in the same direction.
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• What's a
backdoor?
A
backdoor in
a computer system (or cryptosystem or algorithm) is a method of
bypassing normal authentication or securing remote access to a
computer, while attempting to remain hidden from casual inspection. The
backdoor may take the form of an installed program (e.g., Back Orifice
or the Sony/BMG rootkit backdoor installed when any of millions of Sony
music CDs were played on a Windows computer), or could be a
modification to a legitimate program.
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• What's an IMSI
catcher?
An
IMSI
catcher is a device for intercepting GSM mobile phones. It subjects the
phones in its vicinity to a man in the middle attack, acting to them as
a preferred base station in terms of signal strength.
The
IMSI catcher
logs the IMSI numbers of all the mobile phones in the area, as they
attempt to attach to the base station, and can determine the phone
number of each individual phone. It also allows forcing the mobile
phone connected to it to revert to A5/0 for call encryption (in other
words, no encryption at all), making the call data easy to intercept
and convert to audio. It can also tap and record the phone calls on its
own.
The
GSM
specification requires the handset to authenticate to the network, but
does NOT require the network to authenticate to the handset, which is a
glaring and reportedly intentional security hole.
IMSI
catchers are used by law enforcement and intelligence
agencies.
Several
countermeasures against IMSI catchers exist. A directional antenna can
be used to lock the telephone to a distant base station, making it not
see the nearby IMSI catcher, or the phone can be forced to a specific
base station ID (if the firmware supports it), sacrificing mobility for
security. To avoid being wiretapped, even if the phone is still seen
and recognized, a GSM compatible secure telephone or cipher unit for
end-to-end voice encryption is required.
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• What's TSCM?
TSCM
(Technical Surveillance Counter-Measures) is the original military
abbreviation provided to the trade of bug-sweeping or electronic
counter-surveillance. It is related to ELINT, SIGINT and ECM.
The
United
States Department of Defense defines a TSCM survey as a service
provided by qualified personnel to detect the presence of technical
surveillance devices and hazards and to identify technical security
weaknesses that could aid in the conduct of a technical penetration of
the surveyed facility. A TSCM survey will provide a professional
evaluation of the facility's technical security posture and normally
will consist of a thorough visual, electronic, and physical examination
in and about the surveyed facility.
This
definition is however lacking some of the technical scope involved.
COMSEC (Communications Security), ITSEC (Information Technology
Security) and physical security are also a major part of the work in
the modern environment, the advent of multimedia devices and remote
control technologies allow huge scope for removal of massive amounts of
data in very secure environments by the staff employed within, with or
without their knowledge. Even PlayStation Portables (PSPs) have
wireless connectivity and optional storage capacity, therefore
connection and forward on receive over 54Mbps wireless for hundreds of
meters is achievable. This is only the tip of the iceberg.
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• What's phone
surveillance?
The
official and unofficial tapping of telephone lines is
widespread.
The
contracts
or licenses by which the state controls telephone companies means that
they must provide access for tapping lines to the security services and
the police.
For
mobile
phones the major threat is the collection of communications data. This
data not only includes information about the time and duration of the
call, but also the geographical location where the call was made from
and to whom. This data can be determined generally because the
geographic communications cell that the call was made in is stored with
the details of the call. But it is also possible to get greater
resolution of a persons location by combining information from a number
of cells surrounding the persons location.
Mobile
phones
are, in surveillance terms, a major liability. This liability will only
increase as the new third-generation (3G) phones are introduced. This
is because the base stations will be located closer together.
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• What's business
espionage?
Industrial
espionage and corporate espionage are phrases used to describe
espionage conducted for commercial purposes instead of national
security purposes.
At
the most
innocuous level, the term is applied to the legal and mundane methods
of examining corporate publications, web sites, patent filings, and the
like to determine the activities of a corporation (though this is
normally referred to as business intelligence), through to illegal
methods such as bribery, blackmail, technological surveillance and even
occasional violence. As well as spying on commercial organizations,
governments can also be targets of commercial espionage—for
example, to determine the terms of a tender for a government contract
so that another tenderer can underbid.
Information
can make the difference between success and failure; if a trade secret
is stolen, the competitive playing field is levelled or even tipped in
favor of a competitor.
Although
a
lot of information gathering is accomplished by combing through public
records (public databases and patent filings), at times corporations
feel the best way to get information is to take it. Corporate espionage
is a threat to any business whose livelihood depends on information.
The information competitors seek may be client lists, supplier
agreements, personnel records, research documents, or prototype plans
for a new product or service.
In
recent
years, corporate espionage has taken on an expanded definition. For
instance, attempts to sabotage a corporation may be considered
corporate espionage; in this sense, the term takes on the wider
connotations of its parent word. In some cases, malware and spyware has
even entered the arsenal of the warfare known as corporate
espionage.
The
government of France has conducted ongoing industrial espionage against
American aerodynamics and satellite companies and vice versa.
The
development of the Tupolev Tu-144 supersonic aircraft, with its rapid
design and similarity to Concorde, was one of the most prominent
examples of industrial espionage in the 20th century.
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• How do I
initiate a secure call?
To
initiate
an encrypted call just press the "C" key of the phone keypad for a
couple of seconds. The encryption screen will pop-up, and you will be
able to dial in the number you want to call securely, or select it from
the phone's address book.
After
a
hand-shaking process, the encryption software will let you know
when/whether a secure communication was established.
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• Is your
solution software-based or do I need specially modified
hardware?
Our encryption system is
software-based.
It utilizes the NokiaTMnative processing power and does not require any
additional hardware. We do not change, modify, or compromise the
standard functionality of the Nokia device.
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• Can somebody
decrypt my recorded calls?
No modern hacking/decryption
techniques
are capable of decrypting the signal in any way. Even the
mathematicians who developed the encryption algorithms are not capable
of decrypting your secure calls and messages.
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• Does the other
party need to have the same technology to enable a secure
call?
Yes. This is an end-to-end
protection
system. Both sides of the conversation must use the same technology,
even if they use different Nokia devices. Regular calls (not secure)
can be made from this device to all other phones.
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• Why Symbian and
not other OS?
Click
hereto
access a white paper describing the key characteristics required of an
operating system designed for mobile phones and why Symbian OS is the
best-in-class mobile operating system. It is important to take into
account that some operating systems are more vulnerable than others. It
is worth mentioning that, whilst Microsoft has been continually
patching their desktop OS, the mobile versions, which use a lot of the
same code, has generally gone un-patched.
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• Should I
disable bluetooth on my phone?
Only
set your
Bluetooth connection to ‘visible’ (also called
‘discoverable’) when necessary. Leaving your
Bluetooth
connection set to ‘visible’, means anyone in
Bluetooth
range (~10 metres) could potentially contact you via Bluetooth. It is
advisable to set the Bluetooth connection to visible only when you need
to pair the phone with another device, for instance a headset, your
computer or another phone. In normal use, leave the Bluetooth
connection to hidden, this enables your phone to connect to your
already paired headset or computer but not to devices that have not
been paired.
If
you set
your Bluetooth connection to visible, for instance to use social
network type of applications, do not install applications you do not
trust and you have not specifically requested.
On
a Symbian
OS phone, every time a Bluetooth message is sent to you, you will
receive a prompt stating “RECEIVE MESSAGE?” Never
say
“YES” unless you know who is sending you the
message and
you are expecting such a message from that person. If you say no and
the message continues to be seen, move location and then switch to
hidden mode.
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• Is it risky to
use bluetooth, SMS, or connect my phone to a PC?
As
platform
convergence continues, mobile threats will keep growing. With increased
connectivity through BlueTooh, SMS, instant messaging, email, WiFi,
USB, audio, video, and web, there are more possibilities for cross
device contamination. For example, a smartphone can be affected by a PC
vector via ActiveSync, the synchronization application in Windows
Mobile.
SMiShing,
which involves taking the techniques of phishing by email and porting
them to SMS, is expected to increase. Several variations of the
VBS/Eliles mass mailing worm that also sends short message service
(SMS) messages to mobile phones have already been discovered.
So
far, malicious SMS's have been seen to:
*
have a URL embedded within the message instructing the user to invoke
that link with the phone's web browser
*
instruct the user to divulge sensitive information
*
tell the user to download and install software to their mobile phone
that will compromise the device
As
in the
traditional forms of phishing, this technique relies heavily on
fraudsters masquerading as legitimate entities or using some form of
deception.
There
are
already several spy-ware offerings in the mobile world. Most are
designed to monitor phone numbers and SMS call logs, or to steal SMS
messages by forwarding copies to another phone. Some are also capable
of remotely activate the phone's microphone, allowing somebody to
eavesdrop on a person using his/her cellular phone.
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 |
Glossary |
• Communications
security (COMSEC): Measures and controls
taken to deny unauthorized persons information derived from
telecommunications and ensure the authenticity of such
telecommunications. Communications security includes cryptosecurity,
transmission security, emission security, traffic-flow security. and
physical security of COMSEC material.
- cryptosecurity:
The component of communications security that results from the
provision of technically sound cryptosystems and their proper use. This
includes insuring message confidentiality and authenticity.
- emission security
(EMSEC): Protection resulting from all measures taken to deny
unauthorized persons information of value which might be derived from
intercept and analysis of compromising emanations from
crypto-equipment, automated information systems (computers), and
telecommunications systems.
- physical security:
The component of communications security that results from all physical
measures necessary to safeguard classified equipment, material, and
documents from access thereto or observation thereof by unauthorized
persons.
- traffic-flow security:
Measures that conceal the presence and properties of valid messages on
a network. It includes the protection resulting from features, inherent
in some crypto equipment, that conceal the presence of valid messages
on a communications circuit, normally achieved by causing the circuit
to appear busy at all times.
- transmission security
(TRANSEC): The component of communications security that
results from the application of measures designed to protect
transmissions from interception and exploitation by means other than
cryptanalysis (e.g. frequency hopping and spread spectrum).
Back
to Top
• TSCM
(Technical Surveillance Counter-Measures) is the
original military abbreviation provided to the trade of bug-sweeping or
electronic counter-surveillance. It is related to ELINT, SIGINT and ECM.
The
United States Department of Defense defines a TSCM survey as a service
provided by qualified personnel to detect the presence of technical
surveillance devices and hazards and to identify technical security
weaknesses that could aid in the conduct of a technical penetration of
the surveyed facility. A TSCM survey will provide a professional
evaluation of the facility's technical security posture and normally
will consist of a thorough visual, electronic, and physical examination
in and about the surveyed facility.
This
definition is however lacking some of the technical scope involved.
COMSEC (Communications Security), ITSEC (Information Technology
Security) and physical security are also a major part of the work in
the modern environment, the advent of multimedia devices and remote
control technologies allow huge scope for removal of massive amounts of
data in very secure environments by the staff employed within, with or
without their knowledge. Even PlayStation Portables (PSPs) have
wireless connectivity and optional storage capacity, therefore
connection and forward on receive over 54Mbps wireless for hundreds of
meters is achievable. This is only the tip of the iceberg.
Back to Top
• Surveillance,
counter-surveillance, inverse surveillance, sousveillance
Surveillance is the
art of watching over the activities of persons or groups from a
position of higher authority. Surveillance may be covert (without their
knowledge) or overt (perhaps with frequent reminders such as "we are
watching over you"). Surveillance has been an intrinsic part of human
history. Sun Tzu's The Art of War, written 2,500
years ago, discusses how spies should be used against a person's
enemies. But modern electronic and computer technology have given
surveillance a whole new field of operation. Surveillance can be
automated using computers, and people leave extensive records that
describe their activities.
Counter
surveillance is the practice of avoiding surveillance or
making surveillance difficult. Before computer networks, counter surveillance involved
avoiding agents and communicating secretly. With recent developments;
the Internet, increasing prevalence of electronic security systems, and
computer databases, counter surveillance has grown in scope and
complexity. Now counter surveillance involves everything from knowing
how to delete a file on a computer to avoiding becoming the target of
direct advertising agencies.
Inverse
surveillance is the practice of reversalism on surveillance,
e.g., citizens photographing police, shoppers photographing
shopkeepers, and passengers photographing cab drivers who usually have
surveillance cameras in their cabs. A well-known example is George Haliday's recording of the
Rodney King beating. Inverse surveillance attempts to subvert the
Panoptic gaze of surveillance, and often attempts to subvert the
secrecy of surveillance through making the inverse surveillance
recordings widely available (in contrast to the usually secret or
restricted surveillance tapes).
Sousveillance
(a term coined by Steve Mann, a professor at the University of Toronto [2]) is inverse
surveillance that includes the recording of an activity by a
participant in the activity. Recent sousveillance workshops such as
Microsoft's Continuous
Archival and Recording of Personal Experience are evidence
of a growing sousveillance industry including Microsoft (wearable
cameras), Nokia, Hewlett Packard ("Casual Capture") and many others.
Clinical
Surveillance is the monitoring of events (including, for example, the
occurrences of infectious diseases or chronic diseases) with a
significant impact on public health. Increasingly, clinical
surveillance is being used to inform public policy in allocating health
care resources and meeting patient needs. As health care becomes
increasingly dependent on information systems and the use of clinical
surveillance becomes more widespread, privacy concerns may
arise.
Back to Top
• Surveillance: Impact
The
greatest impact of computer-enabled surveillance is the large number of
organisations involved in surveillance operations:
- The state and security services
still have the most powerful surveillance systems, because they are
enabled under the law. But today levels of state surveillance have
increased, and using computers they are now able to draw together many
different information sources to produce profiles of persons or groups
in society.
- Many large corporations now use
various form of 'passive' surveillance. This is primarily a means of
monitoring the activities of staff and for controlling public
relations. But some large corporations actively use various forms of
surveillance to monitor the activities of activists and campaign groups
who may impact their operations.
- Many companies trade in
information lawfully, buying and selling it from other companies or
local government agencies who collect it. This data is usually bought
by companies who wish to use it for marketing or advertising purposes.
- Personal information is obtained
by many small groups and individuals. Some of this is for harmless
purposes, but increasingly sensitive personal information is being
obtained for criminal purposes, such as credit card and other types of
fraud.
Modern
surveillance cannot be totally avoided. However, non-state groups may
employ surveillance techniques against an organisation, and some
precautions can reduce their success. Some states are also legally
limited in how extensively they can conduct general surveillance of
people they have no particular reason to suspect.
Back to Top
• Surveillance: Telephones and
mobile phones
The
official and unofficial tapping of telephone lines is widespread.
The
contracts or licenses by which the state controls telephone companies
means that they must provide access for tapping lines to the security
services and the police.
For
mobile phones the major threat is the collection of communications
data. This data not only includes information about the time and
duration of the call, but also the geographical location where the call
was made from and to whom. This data can be determined generally
because the geographic communications cell that the call was made in is
stored with the details of the call. But it is also possible to get
greater resolution of a persons location by combining information from
a number of cells surrounding the persons location.
Mobile
phones are, in surveillance terms, a major liability. This liability
will only increase as the new third-generation (3G) phones are
introduced. This is because the base stations will be located closer
together.
Back to Top
•
Business
intelligence (BI) has two basic different
meanings related to the use of the term intelligence.
The primary, less frequently, is the human intelligence capacity
applied in business affairs/activities. Intelligence of Business is a
new field of the investigation of the application of human cognitive
faculties and artificial intelligence technologies to the management
and decision support in different business problems.
The
second, which is the subject of this article, relates to the
intelligence as information valued for its currency and relevance. It
is expert information, knowledge and technologies efficient in the
management of organizational and individual business. Therefore, in
this sense, business intelligence is a broad
category of applications and technologies for gathering, providing
access to, and analyzing data for the purpose of helping enterprise
users make better business decisions. The term implies having a
comprehensive knowledge of all of the factors that affect your
business. It is imperative that you have an in depth knowledge about
factors such as your customers, competitors, business partners,
economic environment, and internal operations to make effective and
good quality business decisions. Business intelligence enables you to
make these kinds of decisions.
A
specialized field of business intelligence known as competitive
intelligence focuses solely on the external competitive
environment. Information is gathered on the actions of competitors and
decisions are made based on this information. Little if any attention
is paid to gathering internal information.
Back to Top
•
Industrial
espionage and corporate espionage are
phrases used to describe espionage conducted for commercial purposes
instead of national security purposes.
At
the most innocuous level, the term is applied to the legal and mundane
methods of examining corporate publications, web sites, patent filings,
and the like to determine the activities of a corporation (though this
is normally referred to as business intelligence), through to illegal
methods such as bribery, blackmail, technological surveillance and even
occasional violence. As well as spying on commercial organizations,
governments can also be targets of commercial espionage—for
example, to determine the terms of a tender for a government contract
so that another tenderer can underbid.
Information can make
the difference between success and failure; if a trade secret is
stolen, the competitive playing field is levelled or even tipped in
favor of a competitor.
Although
a lot of information gathering is accomplished by combing through
public records (public databases and patent filings), at times
corporations feel the best way to get information is to take it.
Corporate espionage is a threat to any business whose livelihood
depends on information. The information competitors seek may be client
lists, supplier agreements, personnel records, research documents, or
prototype plans for a new product or service.
In
recent years, corporate espionage has taken on an expanded definition.
For instance, attempts to sabotage a corporation may be considered
corporate espionage; in this sense, the term takes on the wider
connotations of its parent word. In some cases, malware and spyware has
even entered the arsenal of the warfare known as corporate espionage.
The
government of France has conducted ongoing industrial espionage against
American aerodynamics and satellite companies and vice versa.
The
development of the Tupolev Tu-144 supersonic aircraft, with its rapid
design and similarity to Concorde, was one of the most prominent
examples of industrial espionage in the 20th century.
Back to Top
•
Espionage
is the practice of obtaining information about an organization or a
society that is considered secret or confidential (spying) without the
permission of the holder of the information. What differentiates
espionage from other forms of intelligence work is that espionage
involves obtaining the information by accessing the place where the
information is stored or accessing the people who know the information
and will divulge it through some kind of subterfuge.
Espionage
is usually thought of as part of an institutional effort (i.e.,
governmental or corporate espionage). The term espionage is most
readily associated with state spying on potential or actual enemies,
primarily for military purposes, but this has been extended to spying
involving corporations, known specifically as industrial espionage.
Many nations routinely spy on both their enemies and allies, although
they maintain a policy of not making comment on this. In addition to
utilizing agencies within a government many also employ private
companies to collect information on their behalf such as SCG
International Risk and others. Black's Law Dictionary
(1990) defines espionage as: "...gathering, transmitting, or
losing...information related to the national defence."
A
spy
is a person employed to obtain such secrets. The term intelligence
officer is also used to describe a member of the armed forces, police,
or civilian intelligence agency who specialises in the gathering,
fusion, and analysis of
information and intelligence in order to provide advice to their
government or another organisation. In general, intelligence officers
travel to foreign countries to recruit and "run" intelligence agents,
who in turn spy on their own governments. These agents can be moles
(who are recruited before they get access to secrets) or defectors (who
are recruited after they get access to secrets).
Back to Top
• Cryptography
(or cryptology) is the study of message secrecy. In
modern times, it has become a branch of information theory, as the
mathematical study of information and especially its transmission from
place to place. The noted cryptographer Ron Rivest has observed that
"cryptography is about communication in the presence of adversaries."
It is a central contributor to several fields: information security and
related issues, particularly, authentication, and access control. One
of cryptography's primary purposes is hiding the meaning of messages,
not usually the existence of such messages. In modern times,
cryptography also contributes to computer science. Cryptography is
central to the techniques used in computer and network security for
such things as access control and information confidentiality.
Cryptography is also used in many applications encountered in everyday
life; the security of ATM cards, computer passwords, and electronic
commerce all depend on cryptography.
• Encryption
is the process of obscuring information to make it unreadable without
special knowledge. While encryption has been used to protect
communications for centuries, only organizations and individuals with
an extraordinary need for secrecy had made use of it. In the mid-1970s,
strong encryption emerged from the sole preserve of secretive
government agencies into the public domain, and is now employed in
protecting widely-used systems, such as Internet e-commerce, mobile
telephone networks and bank automatic teller machines.
Encryption
can be used to ensure secrecy, but other techniques are still needed to
make communications secure, particularly to verify the integrity and
authenticity of a message; for example, a message authentication code
(MAC) or digital signatures. Another consideration is protection
against traffic analysis.
Encryption
or software code obfuscation is also used in software copy protection
against reverse engineering, unauthorized application analysis, cracks
and software piracy used in different encryption or obfuscating
software.
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• Public-key cryptography
Symmetric-key
cryptosystems typically use the same key for encryption and decryption.
A significant disadvantage of symmetric ciphers is the key management
necessary to use them securely. Each distinct pair of communicating
parties must, ideally, share a different key. The number of keys
required increases as the square of the number of network members,
which very quickly requires complex key management schemes to keep them
all straight and secret. The difficulty of establishing a secret key
between two communicating parties, when a secure channel doesn't
already exist between them, also presents a chicken-and-egg problem
which is a considerable practical obstacle for cryptography users in
the real world.
In
a groundbreaking 1976 paper, Whitfield Diffie and Martin Hellman
proposed the notion of public-key (also, more
generally, called asymmetric key) cryptography in
which two different but mathematically related keys are used -- a public
key and a private key. A public key system is so
constructed that calculation of the private key is computationally
infeasible from the public key, even though they are necessarily
related. Instead, both keys are generated secretly, as an interrelated
pair. The historian David Kahn described public-key cryptography as
"the most revolutionary new concept in the field since poly-alphabetic
substitution emerged in the Renaissance".
In public-key
cryptosystems, the public key may be freely distributed, while its
paired private key must remain secret. The public key
is typically used for encryption, while the private
or secret key is used for decryption. Diffie and
Hellman showed that public-key cryptography was possible by presenting
the Diffie-Hellman key exchange protocol. In 1978, Ronald Rivest, Adi
Shamir, and Len Adleman invented RSA, another public-key system. And In
1997, it finally became publicly known that asymmetric key cryptography
had been invented by James H. Ellis at GCHQ, a British intelligence
organization, in the early 1970s, and that both the Diffie-Hellman and
RSA algorithms had been previously developed (by Malcolm J.
WilliamsonClifford Cocks, respectively).
Diffie-Hellman
and RSA, in addition to being the first publicly known examples of high
quality public-key cryptosystems, have been among the most widely used.
Others include the Cramer-Shoup cryptosystem, ElGamal encryption, and
various elliptic curve techniques. See Category:Asymmetric-key
cryptosystems.
In
addition to encryption, public-key cryptography can be used to
implement digital signature schemes. A digital signature is reminescent
of an ordinary signature; they both have the characteristic that they
are easy for a user to produce, but difficult for anyone else to forge.
Digital signatures can also be permanently tied to the content of the
message being signed; they cannot be 'moved' from one document to
another, for any attempt will be detectable. In digital signature
schemes, there are two algorithms: one for signing,
in which a secret key is used to process the message (or a hash of the
message, or both), and one for verification, in
which the matching public key is used with the message to check the
validity of the signature. RSA and DSA are two of the most popular
digital signature schemes. Digital signatures are central to the
operation of public key infrastructures and to many network security
schemes (SSL/TLS, many VPNs, etc).
Public-key
algorithms are most often based on the computational complexity of
"hard" problems, often from number theory. The hardness of RSA is
related to the integer factorization problem, while Diffie-Hellman and
DSA are related to the discrete logarithm problem. More recently, elliptic
curve cryptography has developed in which security is based
on number theoretic problems involving elliptic curves. Because of the
complexity of the underlying problems, most public-key algorithms
involve operations such as modular multiplication and exponentiation,
which are much more computationally expensive than the techniques used
in most block ciphers, especially with typical key sizes. As a result,
public-key cryptosystems are commonly "hybrid" systems, in which a fast
symmetric-key encryption algorithm is used for the message itself,
while the relevant symmetric key is sent with the message, but
encrypted using a public-key algorithm. Similarly, hybrid signature
schemes are often used, in which a cryptographic hash function is
computed, and only the resulting hash is digitally signed.
Back to Top
• Cryptography: prohibitions
Because
of its potential to assist the malicious in their schemes, cryptography
has long been of interest to intelligence gathering agencies and law
enforcement agencies. Because of its facilitation of privacy, and the
diminution of privacy attendant on its prohibition, cryptography is
also of considerable interest to civil rights supporters. Accordingly,
there has been a history of controversial legal issues surrounding
cryptography, especially since the advent of inexpensive computers has
made possible widespread access to high quality cryptography.
In
some countries, even the domestic use of cryptography is, or has been,
restricted. Until 1999, France significantly restricted the use of
cryptography domestically. In China, a license is still required to use
cryptography. Many countries have tight restrictions on the use of
cryptography. Among the more restrictive are laws in Belarus, China,
Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Pakistan, Russia, Singapore, Tunisia, Venezuela,
and Vietnam.
In
the United States, cryptography is legal for domestic use, but there
has been much conflict over legal issues related to cryptography. One
particularly important issue has been the export of cryptography and
cryptographic software and hardware. Because of the importance of
cryptanalysis in World War II and an expectation that cryptography
would continue to be important for national security, many western
governments have, at some point, strictly regulated export of
cryptography. After World War II, it was illegal in the US to sell or
distribute encryption technology overseas; in fact, encryption was
classified as a munition, like tanks and nuclear weapons. Until the
advent of the personal computer and the Internet, this was not
especially problematic. Good cryptography is indistinguishable from bad
cryptography for nearly all users, and in any case, most of the
cryptographic techniques generally available were slow and error prone
whether good or bad. However, as the Internet grew and computers became
more widely available, high quality encryption techniques became
well-known around the globe. As a result, export controls came to be
seen to be an impediment to commerce and to research.
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• Circuit
Switched Data, often referred to as CSD,
is the original form of data transmission developed for the TDMA-based
mobile phone systems like GSM. CSD uses a single radio time slot to
deliver 9.6 kbit/s data transmission to the GSM Network and Switching
Subsystem where it could be connected through the equivalent of a
normal modem to the PSTN allowing direct calls to any dial up service.
Prior
to CSD, data transmission over mobile phone systems was done by using a
modem, either built into the phone or attached to it. Such systems were
limited by the quality of the audio signal to 2.4 kbit/s or less. With
the introduction of digital transmission in TDMA-based systems like
GSM, CSD provided almost direct access to the underlying digital
signal, allowing for higher speeds. At the same time, the speech
oriented audio compression used in GSM actually meant that data rates
using a traditional modem connected to the phone would have been even
lower than with older analogue systems.
A
CSD call functions in a very similar way to a
normal voice call in a GSM
network. A single dedicated radio time slot is allocated between the
phone and the base station. A dedicated "sub-time slot" (16 kbit/s) is
allocated from the base station to the transcoder, and finally another
time slot (64 kbit/s) is allocated from the transcoder to the Mobile
Switching Centre (MSC).
At
the MSC, it is possible to use a modem to convert to an "analog"
signal, though this will typically actually be encoded as a digital PCM
signal when sent from the MSC. It is also possible to directly use the
digital signal as an ISDN data signal and feed it into the equivalent
of a remote access server.
GSM
data transmission has advanced since the introduction of CSD:
- HSCSD is a system based on CSD
but designed to provide higher data rates by means of more efficient
channel coding and/or multiple (up to 4) time slots.
- GPRS provides more efficient
packet-based data transmission directly from the mobile phone at speeds
similar to HSCSD.
- Finally EDGE (E-GPRS) and UMTS
provide improved radio interfaces with higher data rates, while still
being backward compatible with the GSM core network.
Back
to Top
• A
Covert listening device, more commonly known as a bug, is
usually a combination of a miniature radio transmitter with a
microphone. The use of bugs, called bugging, is a common technique in
espionage and, increasingly, in police investigations.
Most
bugs use a radio transmitter, but there are many other options for
carrying a signal: radio frequencies may be sent through the main
wiring of a building and picked up outside; transmissions from a
cordless phone can be monitored; and it is possible to pick up the data
from poorly configured wireless computer networks or tune in to the
radio emissions of a computer monitor.
Bugs
come in all shapes and sizes. The original purpose of bugs was to relay
sound, but today the miniaturisation of electronics has progressed so
far that even commercially-available bugs designed to carry TV signals
are usually the size of a cigarette packet. Professional bugs can fit
into pens, calculators and other commonplace items. Some are only the
size of small shirt buttons, although the power and operational life of
the smallest bugs is very short.
The
development of modern 'wireless' technology has presented new security
concerns. To be 'wireless' a device must transmit information, either
by radio waves or infrared light, and this potentially makes all the
information sent via that link available to others. Radio waves are the
easiest to intercept, but even infrared transmissions can be picked up
through a window. Some wireless devices, such as wireless computer
networks, do encrypt transmissions, but the standard forms of
encryption are weak. Such devices, whether wireless keyboards or
wireless telephones, should not be used in any environment where
sensitive information is handled.
Most
bugs emit radio waves. The standard counter-measure for bugs is
therefore to 'sweep' for them with a receiver, looking for the radio
emissions. Professional sweeping devices are very expensive. Low-tech
sweeping devices are available through amateur electrical magazines, or
they may be built from circuit designs on the Internet. But sweeping is
not foolproof. Advanced bugs can be remotely operated to switch on and
off, and some even rapidly switch frequencies according to a
predetermined pattern in order to make location with sweepers more
difficult. A bug that has run out of power may not show up during a
sweep, which means that the sweeper will not be alerted to the
surveillance.
A
mobile phone may transmit at moments or to a receiving party that the
listened-to party does not expect.
• Cryptography.
As the field of cryptography has advanced, the
dividing lines for what is and what is not cryptography have become
blurred. Cryptography today might be summed up as the study of
techniques and applications that depend on the existence of difficult
problems.
Cryptanalysis
is the study of how to compromise (defeat) cryptographic mechanisms,
and cryptology (from the Greek kryptós lógos,
meaning ``hidden word'') is the discipline of cryptography and
cryptanalysis combined.
To
most people, cryptography is concerned with keeping communications
private. Indeed, the protection of sensitive communications has been
the emphasis of cryptography throughout much of its history. However,
this is only one part of today's cryptography.
Encryption
is the transformation of data into a form that is as close to
impossible as possible to read without the appropriate knowledge. Its
purpose is to ensure privacy by keeping information hidden from anyone
for whom it is not intended, even those who have access to the
encrypted data. Decryption is the reverse of encryption; it is the
transformation of encrypted data back into an intelligible form.
Encryption
and decryption generally require the use of some secret information,
referred to as a key. For some encryption mechanisms, the same key is
used for both encryption and decryption; for other mechanisms, the keys
used for encryption and decryption are different
Today's
cryptography is more than encryption and decryption. Authentication is
as fundamentally a part of our lives as privacy. We use authentication
throughout our everyday lives - when we sign our name to some document
for instance - and, as we move to a world where our decisions and
agreements are communicated electronically, we need to have electronic
techniques for providing authentication.
Cryptography
provides mechanisms for such procedures. A digital signature binds a
document to the possessor of a particular key, while a digital
timestamp binds a document to its creation at a particular time. These
cryptographic mechanisms can be used to control access to a shared disk
drive, a high security installation, or a pay-per-view TV channel.
The
field of cryptography encompasses other uses as well. With just a few
basic cryptographic tools, it is possible to build elaborate schemes
and protocols that allow us to pay using electronic money, to prove we
know certain information without revealing the information itself, and
to share a secret quantity in such a way that a subset of the shares
can reconstruct the secret.
While
modern cryptography is growing increasingly diverse, cryptography is
fundamentally based on problems that are difficult to solve. A problem
may be difficult because its solution requires some secret knowledge,
such as decrypting an encrypted message or signing some digital
document. The problem may also be hard because it is intrinsically
difficult to complete, such as finding a message that produces a given
hash value.
(extracted
from RSA Security web site, see citation)
• RSA
Cryptosystem.
The
RSA cryptosystem is a public-key cryptosystem that offers both
encryption and digital signatures (authentication). Ronald Rivest, Adi
Shamir, and Leonard Adleman developed the RSA system in 1977; RSA
stands for the first letter in each of its inventors' last names.
The
RSA algorithm works as follows: take two large primes, p and q, and
compute their product n = pq; n is called the modulus. Choose a number,
e, less than n and relatively prime to (p-1)(q-1), which means e and
(p-1)(q-1) have no common factors except 1. Find another number d such
that (ed - 1) is divisible by (p-1)(q-1). The values e and d are called
the public and private exponents, respectively. The public key is the
pair (n, e); the private key is (n, d). The factors p and q may be
destroyed or kept with the private key.
It
is currently difficult to obtain the private key d from the public key
(n, e). However if one could factor n into p and q, then one could
obtain the private key d. Thus the security of the RSA system is based
on the assumption that factoring is difficult. The discovery of an easy
method of factoring would "break" RSA.
Here
is how the RSA system can be used for encryption and digital signatures
(in practice, the actual use is slightly different:
Encryption
Suppose
Alice wants to send a message m to Bob. Alice creates the ciphertext c
by exponentiating: c = me mod n, where e and n are Bob's public key.
She sends c to Bob. To decrypt, Bob also exponentiates: m = cd mod n;
the relationship between e and d ensures that Bob correctly recovers m.
Since only Bob knows d, only Bob can decrypt this message.
Digital
Signature
Suppose
Alice wants to send a message m to Bob in such a way that Bob is
assured the message is both authentic, has not been tampered with, and
from Alice. Alice creates a digital signature s by exponentiating: s =
md mod n, where d and n are Alice's private key. She sends m and s to
Bob. To verify the signature, Bob exponentiates and checks that the
message m is recovered: m = se mod n, where e and n are Alice's public
key.
Thus
encryption and authentication take place without any sharing of private
keys: each person uses only another's public key or their own private
key. Anyone can send an encrypted message or verify a signed message,
but only someone in possession of the correct private key can decrypt
or sign a message.
(extracted
from RSA Security web site, see citation)
• Algorithm.
In
mathematics and computing, an algorithm is a procedure (a finite set of
well-defined instructions) for accomplishing some task which, given an
initial state, will terminate in a defined end-state. The computational
complexity and efficient implementation of the algorithm are important
in computing, and this depends on suitable data structures.
Informally,
the concept of an algorithm is often illustrated by the example of a
recipe, although many algorithms are much more complex; algorithms
often have steps that repeat (iterate) or require decisions (such as
logic or comparison). Algorithms can be composed to create more complex
algorithms.
The
concept of an algorithm originated as a means of recording procedures
for solving mathematical problems such as finding the common divisor of
two numbers or multiplying two numbers. The concept was formalized in
1936 through Alan Turing's Turing machines and Alonzo Church's lambda
calculus, which in turn formed the foundation of computer science.
Most
algorithms can be directly implemented by computer programs; any other
algorithms can at least in theory be simulated by computer programs. In
many programming languages, algorithms are implemented as functions or
procedures.
• Brute
Force Attack.
In
cryptanalysis, a brute force attack is a method of defeating a
cryptographic scheme by trying a large number of possibilities; for
example, exhaustively working through all possible keys in order to
decrypt a message. In most schemes, the theoretical possibility of a
brute force attack is recognized, but it is set up in such a way that
it would be computationally infeasible to carry out. Accordingly, one
definition of "breaking" a cryptographic scheme is to find a method
faster than a brute force attack.
The
selection of an appropriate key length depends on the practical
feasibility of performing a brute force attack. By obfuscating the data
to be encoded, brute force attacks are made less effective as it is
more difficult to determine when one has succeeded in breaking the code.
• GSM:
Global System for Mobile Communications.
The
Global System for Mobile Communications, GSM (original acronym: Groupe
Spécial Mobile) is the most popular standard for mobile
phones in the world. GSM service is used by over 2 billion people
across more than 212 countries and territories. The ubiquity of the GSM
standard makes international roaming very common between mobile phone
operators, enabling subscribers to use their phones in many parts of
the world. GSM differs significantly from its predecessors in that both
signaling and speech channels are Digital call quality, which means
that it is considered a second generation (2G) mobile phone system.
This fact has also meant that data communication was built into the
system from the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP).
From
the point of view of the consumers, the key advantage of GSM systems
has been higher digital voice quality and low cost alternatives to
making calls such as text messaging. The advantage for network
operators has been the ability to deploy equipment from different
vendors because the open standard allows easy inter-operability. Like
other cellular standards GSM allows network operators to offer roaming
services which mean subscribers can use their phones all over the world.
As
the GSM standard continued to develop, it retained backward
compatibility with the original GSM phones; for example, packet data
capabilities were added in the Release '97 version of the standard, by
means of GPRS. Higher speed data transmission has also been introduced
with EDGE in the Release '99 version of the standard.
• Firmware.
Firmware
is a software program or set of instructions programmed on a hardware
device. It provides the necessary instructions for how the device
communicates with the other computer hardware. But how can software be
programmed onto hardware? Good question. Firmware is typically stored
in the flash ROM of a hardware device. While ROM is "read-only memory,"
flash ROM can be erased and rewritten because it is actually a type of
flash memory.
Firmware
can be thought of as "semi-permanent" since it remains the same unless
it is updated by a firmware updater. You may need to update the
firmware of certain devices, such as hard drives and video cards in
order for them to work with a new operating system. CD and DVD drive
manufacturers often make firmware updates available that allow the
drives to read faster media. Sometimes manufacturers release firmware
updates that simply make their devices work more efficiently.
(extracted
from Sharpened Computer Glossary, see citation)
• Half
Duplex.
A
half-duplex system provides for communication in both directions, but
only one direction at a time (not simultaneously). Typically, once a
party begins receiving a signal, it must wait for the transmitter to
stop transmitting, before replying.
An
example of a half-duplex system is a two-party system such as a
"walkie-talkie" style two-way radio, wherein one must use "Over" or
another procedure to indicate the end of transmission, and ensure that
only one party transmits at a time, because both parties transmit on
the same frequency. A good analogy for a half-duplex system would be a
one lane road with traffic controllers at each end. Traffic can flow in
both directions, but only one direction at a time with this being
regulated by the controllers.
• Full
Duplex.
A
full-duplex system allows communication in both directions, and unlike
half-duplex, allows this to happen simultaneously. Land-line telephone
networks are full-duplex since they allow both callers to speak and be
heard at the same time. A good analogy for a full-duplex system would
be a two lane road with one lane for each direction. Examples:
Telephone, Mobile Phone, etc.
Two
way radios can be, for instance, designed as full-duplex systems, which
transmit on one frequency and receive on a different frequency. This is
also called frequency-division duplex. Frequency-division-duplex
systems can be extended to farther distances using pairs of simple
repeater stations, owing to the fact the communications transmitted on
any one frequency always travels in the same direction.
• Wiretap.
Telephone
tapping (or wire tapping/wiretapping in the US) is the monitoring of
telephone and Internet conversations by a third party, often by covert
means. The telephone tap or wire tap received its name because
historically, the monitoring connection was applied to the wires of the
telephone line of the person who was being monitored and drew off or
tapped a small amount of the electrical signal carrying the
conversation. Legalized wiretapping by police or other recognized
governmental authority is otherwise known as lawful interception.
Official use
The
contracts or licenses by which the state controls telephone companies
often require that the companies must provide access for tapping lines
to the security services and the police. In the U.S.,
telecommunications carriers are required by law to cooperate in the
interception of communications for law enforcement purposes under the
terms of CALEA. Taps must be secret and undetectable.
When
telephone exchanges were mechanical, a tap had to be installed by
technicians, linking circuits together to route the audio signal from
the call. Now that many exchanges have been converted to digital
technology tapping is far simpler and can be ordered remotely by
computer. Telephone services provided by cable TV companies also use
digital switching technology. If the tap is implemented at a digital
switch, the switching computer simply copies the digitized bits that
represent the phone conversation to a second line and it is impossible
to tell whether a line is being tapped. A well designed tap installed
on a phone wire can be difficult to detect. The noises that some people
believe to be telephone taps are simply crosstalk created by the
coupling of signals from other phone lines.
Data
on the calling and called number, time of call and duration, will
generally be collected automatically on all calls and stored for later
use by the billing department of the phone company. This data can be
accessed by security services, often with fewer legal restrictions than
for a tap. This information used to be collected using special
equipment known as pen registers and trap and trace devices and U.S.
law still refers to it under those names. Today, a list of all calls to
a specific number can be obtained by sorting billing records. A
telephone tap during which only the call information is recorded but
not the contents of the phone calls themselves, is called a Pen
Register tap.
For
telephone services via digital exchanges, the information collected may
additionally include a log of the type of communications media being
used (some services treat data and voice communications differently to
conserve bandwidth).
Unofficial use
It
is also possible to tap conversations unofficially. There are a number
of ways to monitor telephone conversations:
Recording
the conversation - the person making/receiving the call records the
conversation using a coil tap ('telephone pickup coil') attached to the
ear-piece, or they fit an in-line tap with a recording output. Both of
these are easily available through electrical shops. A more modern
alternative is to use telephone recording devices connected to
computers, such as PhoneValet Message Center. Most who record telephone
conversations, such as journalists, will refer to the recording for
their work.
Direct
line tap - this is what the state used to do via the telephone
exchange. But unofficial tapping, where the user's line is physically
tapped near the house, is also possible. The tap can either involve a
direct electrical connection to the line, or an induction coil. An
induction coil is usually placed underneath the base of a telephone or
on the back of a telephone handset to pick up the signal inductively.
With a direct connection, there will be some drop in signal levels
because of the loss of power from the line, and it may also generate
noise on the line. A well designed induction tap does not drain voltage
or current from the line because it isn't physically connected to the
phone line. Direct taps sometimes require regular maintenance, either
to change tapes or replace batteries, which may give away their
presence.
Radio
tap - this is like a bug that fits on the telephone line. The state
does not normally do this because they have access via the telephone
exchange, though certain organizations exempt from the common framework
of law applying to citizens may use devices like this. It can be fitted
to one phone inside the house, or outside on the phone line. It may
produce noise (there might even be signal feedback on the monitored
line on poorly made equipment) to inadvertently alert the caller.
Modern state of the art equipment operates in the 30-300 GHz range. The
unit is powered from the line to be maintenance free, and only
transmits when a call is in progress. These devices tend to be low
powered because the drain on the line would become too great, however a
state of the art receiver could be located as far away as ten
kilometers under ideal conditions, but is usually located within a
radius of 1 to 3 km. Research however has also shown that a satellite
can be used to receive emissions in the range of a few milliwatts.
To
guard against unofficial amateur line taps, the phone should be
regularly inspected, and the telephone line should be checked for new
joints, or small wires connected to the line; a time-domain
reflectometer is a worthy tool here. If you have reason to suspect your
phone has been tapped consult a technical surveillance countermeasures
(TSCM) specialist. Never contact a TSCM specialist from a phone you
suspect is tapped or on any other phone on the premises or any other
phone that is linked to you or your organization (home phone, company
cellular, etc.).
• Backdoor.
A
backdoor in a computer system (or cryptosystem or algorithm) is a
method of bypassing normal authentication or securing remote access to
a computer, while attempting to remain hidden from casual inspection.
The backdoor may take the form of an installed program (e.g., Back
Orifice or the Sony/BMG rootkit backdoor installed when any of millions
of Sony music CDs were played on a Windows computer), or could be a
modification to a legitimate program.
• IMSI
Catcher.
An
IMSI catcher is a device for
intercepting GSM mobile phones. It subjects the phones in its vicinity
to a man in the middle attack, acting to them as a preferred base
station in terms of signal strength.
The
IMSI catcher logs the IMSI numbers of all the mobile phones in the
area, as they attempt to attach to the base station, and can determine
the phone number of each individual phone. It also allows forcing the
mobile phone connected to it to revert to A5/0 for call encryption (in
other words, no encryption at all), making the call data easy to
intercept and convert to audio. It can also tap and record the phone
calls on its own.
The
GSM specification requires the handset to authenticate to the network,
but does NOT require the network to authenticate to the handset, which
is a glaring and reportedly intentional security hole.
IMSI
catchers are used by law enforcement and intelligence agencies.
Several
countermeasures against IMSI catchers exist. A directional antenna can
be used to lock the telephone to a distant base station, making it not
see the nearby IMSI catcher, or the phone can be forced to a specific
base station ID (if the firmware supports it), sacrificing mobility for
security. To avoid being wiretapped, even if the phone is still seen
and recognized, a GSM compatible secure telephone or cipher unit for
end-to-end voice encryption is required.
• Eavesdropping.
Eavesdropping
is the intercepting of conversations by unintended recipients. One who
participates in eavesdropping (i.e. someone who secretly listens in on
the conversations of others) is called an eavesdropper. The origin of
the term comes from situations in which people would literally hide out
in the eavesdrop of a house to listen in on private conversations.
Citations
Communications security.
(2006, October 26). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Retrieved 05:01, October 28, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Communications_security&oldid=83930448
Technical Surveillance
Counter-Measures. (2006, October 12). In Wikipedia, The Free
Encyclopedia. Retrieved 05:06, October 28, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Technical_Surveillance_Counter-Measures&oldid=81111566
Surveillance.
(2006, October 23). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Retrieved 05:12, October 28, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Surveillance&oldid=83282391
Business
intelligence. (2006, October 26). In Wikipedia, The Free
Encyclopedia. Retrieved 05:25, October 28, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Business_intelligence&oldid=83862343
Industrial espionage.
(2006, October 19). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Retrieved 05:31, October 28, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Industrial_espionage&oldid=82435589
Espionage. (2006,
October 27). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Retrieved 05:38, October 28, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Espionage&oldid=84144756
Cryptography.
(2006, October 26). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Retrieved 05:41, October 28, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Cryptography&oldid=83828051
Encryption.
(2006, October 27). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Retrieved 05:43, October 28, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Encryption&oldid=84073599
Circuit Switched Data.
(2006, September 14). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Retrieved 05:59, October 28, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Circuit_Switched_Data&oldid=75709471
Covert listening
device. (2006, November 10). In Wikipedia, The Free
Encyclopedia. Retrieved 04:29, November 12, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Covert_listening_device&oldid=86955270
What
is Crytpography?. From RSA Security. Retrieved
01:59, November 12, 2006, from http://www.rsasecurity.com/rsalabs/node.asp?id=2157
The RSA
Cryptosystem. From RSA Security. Retrieved 02:08,
November 12, 2006, from http://www.rsasecurity.com/rsalabs/node.asp?id=2214
Algorithm.
(2006, November 12). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Retrieved 07:15, November 12, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Algorithm&oldid=87295986
Brute force attack.
(2006, November 7). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Retrieved 07:19, November 12, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Brute_force_attack&oldid=86297776
Global System for
Mobile Communications. (2006, November 9). In Wikipedia, The
Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 07:32, November 12, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Global_System_for_Mobile_Communications&oldid=86740425
Fimware. In Sharpened
Computer Glossary. Retrieved 02:39, November 12, 2006, from http://www.sharpened.net/glossary/definition.php?firmware
Duplex
(telecommunications). (2006, November 3). In Wikipedia, The
Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 07:45, November 12, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Duplex_%28telecommunications%29&oldid=85399120
Telephone tapping. (2006,
November 17). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 02:49,
November 18, 2006, from
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Telephone_tapping&oldid=88353442
Backdoor.
(2006, November 8). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved
03:15, November 18, 2006, from
http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Backdoor&oldid=86470970
IMSI-catcher.
(2006, September 22). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia.
Retrieved 03:28, November 18, 2006, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=IMSI-catcher&oldid=77088467
Eavesdropping.
(2006, November 15). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved
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http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eavesdropping&oldid=87989496
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