|
|
We Update Daily! Chris S. Kenoyer. Owner & Follow Us Now On Twitter
Email Us Here Or
Email Us Securely Here
The Website Audio &
Multimedia
Content! 24/7 365 Days A Year Of Sales! ******************************** OnlinePot Free Newsletter
To translate text or a web page go to: Language Tools Google Translations Website
Submissions & News Is CBD? A Possible
Cure For Cancer Cured:
A Cannabis Story
Website Navigational Links Main
Start Page 2 Parody's
Cartoons US
Amsterdam
A to Z Canadian
Marijuana
Websites ******************************************* ******************************************* 100's
Of Marijuana Grow Guides ******************************************* ******************************************* Cannabis
Legal Info, Drug ******************************************* ******************************************* Websites Link Exchange! ******************************************* Medical
Marijuana
Studies, ******************************************* The Politics Of
Contraband ******************************************* ******************************************* ******************************************* ******************************************* ******************************************* 800+
FAQ Growing Questions ******************************************* Patients
Spiritual
Guidance,
Online
Marijuana Seed Banks Maximum Security
Section Traveling
Tips, Guides, B & B's ******************************************* ******************************************* ******************************************* Visit Our Sister Websites! The
Reefer Madness Listen Right Here Online! The Reefer Madness Teaching Museum.org 1999-2011 Copyright ©
|
Privacy And Security On
Your PC
|
Privacy and Security on your PC Who's after your data, and why? |
|
|
Many different kinds of individuals and agencies seek personal information,
each using differing methods. These groups, and the methods they employ, will
be examined below.
Individuals
One of the most well known home computer monitoring programs, called
Spector from www.spectorsoft.com,
sells for under $70. Hundreds of password cracking and Trojan programs are
freely available on Internet on sites such as www.infosyssec.net.
In recent years, password cracking tools have evolved from tools that required
you to have an intricate understanding of computer systems into more
simplified tools that are very user friendly. The freeware password cracking
tool called Cain from www.oxid.it
is an example of this simplified type. Within minutes of installation, Cain
can reveal passwords for screensavers, Internet dial-up logons, internal
networks, and other passwords that have been used on a Windows based computer
system. When I first tested Cain, it correctly identified the password that
would allow access to make changes on my personal web page.
Businesses Note that as various forms of spyware become known or tracking subterfuges
are exposed, companies modify or eliminate their data-gathering techniques.
Some of the products listed above have recently removed or modified their
spyware aspects, while others, such as Kazaa, have only recently been
announced. The underlying ability remains, however, and the temptation is
strong.
In addition to data gathering for dubious purposes, businesses can also
constitute a threat to individual privacy by mishandling information they
control. Two recent examples of this were the disclosure of the names of 600
Prozac users by pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly, and the disclosure of 400
organ donor names by the University of Minnesota.
Government Agencies The IRS and CIA have both had highly publicized incidents where they failed
to safeguard the private information within their possession. According to
Iowa Representative Greg Ganske, IRS employees have been repeatedly caught
improperly using information in the custody of the agency, but the General
Accounting Office found that only 2.3% of those caught were actually fired. As
recently as March of 2002, the CIA was embarrassed by having its network
mapped and the names, phone numbers and e-mail addresses of numerous agents
posted on the Internet. The situation with the CIA was further exacerbated by
the fact that this occurred after the September 11th terrorist attacks, and
was accomplished in merely two days using freely accessible and unclassified
information found on the Internet.
While the IRS and CIA may cause privacy concerns by mishandling
information, it is the information gathering methods of the NSA and FBI that
sometimes places those agencies at odds with individual privacy. Agencies of
the U.S. Federal Government have long used technology to gather information on
citizens. The first telephone wiretap in the United States occurred in 1885
– only four years after the introduction of the telephone. According to
Justice John Paul Stevens of the U.S. Supreme Court, the FBI had amassed
records on 24 million people as of 1989. In comparison, the 1999 CNN special
report "Cold War" disclosed that the former East Germany's Stasi, or
secret police, amassed records on only 6 million people.
The FBI's use of secretly installed keystroke logging software was recently
made public by the case of Nicodemo S. Scarfo (United States v. Scarfo, 2002).
In that case, the FBI obtained court approval to covertly enter Mr. Scarfo's
premises and install software that recorded every keystroke made on Mr.
Scarfo's computer including his typed passwords. The FBI also uses another
information-gathering tool, DCS-1000, formerly called CARNIVORE. This system
consists of hardware connected to an Internet service provider's equipment
that allows the FBI to intercept all e-mail traffic sent or received by a
specific individual without their knowledge. Unlike traditional telephone
wiretaps, which must be narrowly focused, to intercept specific targeted
conversations, DCS-1000 searches and intercepts all communications of
an individual. Title 18, section 2518(4) of the United States Code gives
Internet service providers no choice in cooperating with electronic
surveillance. In November of 2001, an FBI response to a Freedom of Information
Act request, admitted the existence of "an enhanced CARNIVORE
project" called "Magic Lantern" - a remotely installable key
logger that can be sent to a computer via e-mail.
The NSA uses a much larger system for interception of communications data.
It is called ECHELON, and consists of a global network of satellites and
monitoring stations that screen all telephonic, e-mail, and facsimile
transmissions. Obviously, processing all such data would be impossible;
however, the system does not process all of the data, but rather carefully
screens it for specific keywords and phrases, and captures only transmissions
that meet pre-defined criteria. All of the captured data is then analyzed to
extract pertinent information. Both CARNIVORE and ECHELON have evoked
grass-roots protest movements.
Another method of government information gathering that could possibly pose
a privacy risk is monitoring of TEMPEST emanations. These electronic signals
are created by a computer monitor, and can be intercepted and used to
re-create the screen image. This technology requires sensitive reception
equipment that must be in close physical proximity to the computer being
observed. Such reception equipment is illegal for individuals to possess, use,
or sell in the United States.
This concludes Part One of Privacy and Security on your PC. The second
installment covers a layered approach to computer security. As we go through
the six levels, we'll give you links to tools that can help you secure your
system and keep your personal data private of this article covered the people who want your data, the technologies
available to them, and the Constitutional underpinnings of your right to
privacy. Here in Part II we cover the six layers of privacy protection, with
dozens of links to products and services that will maximize your privacy.
The most effective thing you can do to protect the private information on
your computer is to establish a layered approach to security. You need to
build first-line, second-line, third-line (etc.) defenses, and consider the
consequences at each level if those defenses should fail.
Not to indulge in an overused, and rather passé phrase, but when it comes
to computer security, you are the weakest link. The most sophisticated
security system in the world cannot protect the privacy of information if you
don't develop and adhere to good privacy protection habits.
First and foremost, develop the habit of non-disclosure. Simply because
forms or applications request private information does not mean that you
should automatically divulge the information. Generous use of "Not
Applicable" or "N/A" is a prudent habit to develop. You can be
more proactive, if you like, handling excessive demands for personal
information with a campaign of disinformation. Simply altering a few
characters of a name, zip code, or social security number when inputting data
on Internet forms causes information to be associated with the fictitious
identity, thus defeating data mining and profiling techniques. Of course, you
should be especially stingy with information that uniquely identifies you,
such as your driver's license number or social security number. Such entries
should be limited to online banking, passport renewal, or other dealings with
trusted firms and agencies.
Another important privacy protection habit is educating yourself to the
specific weaknesses of your hardware, operating system, and applications.
One example of a hardware weakness would be the TEMPEST emanations
discussed in Part
I, but you would, first and foremost, have to be a pretty bad dude to be
the subject of TEMPEST monitoring. Researchers and security experts differ on
how effective TEMPEST monitoring is, how directional the antennas are, and how
well one machine's emanations can be differentiated from another's.
Researchers Markus
Kuhn and Ross Anderson say that TEMPEST monitoring can be prevented with
techniques such as using gray scales to mask characters on the screen.
Alternatively, you can supposedly jam the emanations by placing a second
computer within the same room and having its monitor generate an electrical
smokescreen of characters by using a screensaver similar to the one used in
the movie "The Matrix." We would theorize that an older monitor with
higher emissions than a new one, running at the same resolution and refresh
rate, would be most effective, but you're not that paranoid, are you?
Most browsers have an autocomplete feature that remembers what you've typed
when you fill in online forms. After you've typed a few characters, the
autocomplete feature creates a drop-down box that contains the remainder of a
zip code or other data. How did your computer know what information was needed
to fill in the desired blank? You might be shocked to find that your Social
Security number, bank account number, passwords, birthday, address, mother's
maiden name, and credit card numbers are all stored on your computer if you've
entered them into forms. You can clear out this information and disable this
feature with only nine clicks of the mouse:
From the Internet Explorer Tools menu, click: Internet Options|Content
tab|autocomplete button, then uncheck all three boxes and click the two
buttons to "clear forms" and "clear passwords", then click
"OK" to close the two open dialog boxes.
Do you play games at work? Use unauthorized software? Windows can give you
away. It maintains Applog files in the System folder and keeps a record of
which programs are used most frequently. Windows uses this information if you
select the defragmentation option to rearrange your program files so that your
programs start faster. Deleting the Applog folder's contents prevents that
record from being examined to determine your usage habits.
Windows temporary files can create a privacy concern if they contain
personal information and are not securely deleted. If, for example, you create
or edit a document in Microsoft Word and then save it, Windows immediately
creates a temporary file containing information from the old (pre-saved)
version of the text document. Windows may store this temporary file in any
available space on the computer's hard drive. When you turn off the computer,
the temporary file is "deleted," meaning that its storage space is
marked as available for future data to be recorded. However, the file's
contents are not actually erased from the hard drive. The information from the
old document can be recovered using simple file recovery or disk inspection
software if no new data has been written to the old document's storage
location on the hard drive.
A simple, but tedious, protection measure that avoids the problem of old
document contents being invisibly stored, is to use the "save as"
command on Microsoft Word's File Menu instead of the "save" icon.
The "save as" command allows a user to change the file name each
time the file is saved, thus preserving the old (pre-saved) versions of the
document in a visible form and making them easier to securely delete.
Many applications create temporary files to facilitate automatic recovery
of your work in the event (or is that a certainty?) of an operating system
crash. After a few months' use, these files, typically beginning with the
tilde (~) character, litter your system. Using the Windows Disk Cleanup
utility restores the space taken by the temporary files, but doesn't erase the
data. An additional step, secure deletion of free space, is necessary, as
we'll see in Layer Five, below.
Microsoft Word itself has a significant weakness in the way it handles
revisions to a document and "deleted" text. You're probably aware of
Word's undelete/undo features, but have you considered how this task is
accomplished? Text that has been "deleted" in a Microsoft Word
document is actually not erased at all. It is merely coded to not appear when
viewed or printed; similar to the way other non-printing characters like
paragraph indentations or page breaks do not appear. The "deleted"
text can be viewed by using the Notepad program in Windows or Edit program in
MS DOS. If you email a Word document or give it on a disk to someone, all your
edits and revisions go with it. So that letter that you jokingly started,
"Dear Meathead..." and then erased still bears your original
sentiment. Older versions of Word even include passwords to
supposedly-protected documents.
Preventing this type of leak is as simple as cutting and pasting the Word
document's text into a new Word document before sending it to anyone. All of
the revisions are left behind; the new document is built with only the visible
text. Similar cautions apply to any application with an undo/redo feature.
If you're serious about maintaining your privacy, password discipline
should also be habitual. If you're unfamiliar with password cracking methods,
you're likely to make many common mistakes. A 1999 survey by Network Computing
magazine revealed that two thirds of people use the same password for multiple
accounts. So if you visit a fraudulent Web site and enter a password as part
of creating an account or an identity, then the odds are great that the site
owner will have access your email or other accounts with the password given.
Another common mistake is selecting insecure passwords. Passwords should be
a minimum of 8 to 10 characters long and be composed of a combination
of numerals, punctuation marks, and upper and lower case letters. Passwords
should never be the name of a person, a birth date, sequential numbers, or any
word from a dictionary of any language. Password cracking programs using a
dictionary attack can easily guess a password by trying every word in an
entire dictionary. This process takes only seconds to complete on computers
using Pentium (or faster) processors.
One method of password selection would be to incorporate a strategy of
obfuscation. For example, you could record a CD with dozens of full-length,
classic e-book texts such as War and Peace, Les Miserables, the
complete works of Shakespeare, etc., and chooses a few letters from a word at
the end of one sentence and a few letters from the beginning of the next
sentence as a password. This would result in a strong password with upper
case, lower case, and punctuation characters. If you were to insert this CD
and use a mouse to navigate to the correct e-book location, highlight the
characters, and then copy and paste them wherever a password was required, you
would prevent a key logger from detecting anything because the keyboard would
never be used. The CD itself would be of little use to any one looking for
your password, and if the CD were ever inadvertently lost or damaged, you
could easily recreate it from the public-domain texts. Note that although the
cut-and-pasted characters may not be visible to a keyboard logger, some spy
programs also take periodic snapshots of the screen, and you might be unlucky
enough to have your password snapped between the time you paste and hit the
Enter key. Physical Barriers Firewalls, Web Filters, and Tracking Detection Firewalls Web Filters
You can block referrers several different ways, including with filtering
software such as The Proxomitron, which is available from www.extremetech.com/proxomitron.
Proxomitron is a proxy server that runs locally on your machine, filtering
inbound and outbound traffic. If you'd prefer not to have web filtering
software installed on you computer, you can use online web filtering tools
such as Anonymizer at www.anonymizer.com
or Rewebber at www.rewebber.de.
These sites redirect your Web traffic through their machines, filtering the
outbound traffic and removing all identifiers, including your IP address, from
your packets.
Tracking Detection If the first three layers of defense fail and unauthorized access to the
computer does occur, it is important to be aware of the intrusion so that it
can be dealt with as quickly as possible. Specialized detection software is
needed for this purpose because Trojan, key logging, and spyware programs are
designed to run invisibly and will appear neither in the Windows system tray,
nor in the task manager window that appears when CTRL-ALT-DEL is pressed once.
Two free programs that assist in the detection of intruders are Regmon which
provides a real-time display of all changes to the Windows registry, and
FileMonitor which displays all file opening and closing activity as it is
occurring. These two programs are available from: www.sysinternals.com.
Trojan Detection Spyware Detection
Key Logger Detection Fifth Layer: Minimize Exposed Information Secure Deletion BC Wipe is a multifunction secure deletion tool available from: www.jetico.com.
It clears and overwrites the Windows swap file (WIN386.SWP), file slack space,
and the unused space on a hard drive. All of these areas can potentially
contain private information. The BC-Wipe program offers various options for
data deletion ranging from a fast single overwrite up to capabilities that
meet U.S. Department of Defense data destruction requirements for classified
information.
Clean System Directory from www.theabsolute.net
is a free application that allows users to remove dynamic linked library files
(.dll) that were left behind when their corresponding applications were
uninstalled. From a privacy standpoint, the removal of these files prevents
someone from examining the Windows system folder and determining what programs
were previously installed.
Clean Up! is a free program from The Strangely Green Chicken Company at: free.prohosting.com/~sgould/cleanup/README.html#Download.
With only a single mouse click, it searches for and deletes files containing
private information about Internet activity. This program's deleted files
include the Index.dat files that contain a cumulative list of every website
visited. A user attempting to simply delete the Index.dat files without such a
program will discover that Windows blocks user access to these files.
Empty Temp Folders from: danish-shareware.dk
is a free multifunction application which allows users to selectively delete
cookies, Internet history items, and temporary files, in addition to clearing
the Windows clipboard, and finding broken links to files that have been
deleted. Finding and deleting broken links to deleted files, is one of the
loose ends that can disclose a user's activities on a computer.
Properties Plus from www.ne.jp
is a free program that allows a user to alter the time/date stamp that Windows
places on every file. This time/date information can be used not only to see
when a user created, modified, or last accessed a particular file, but by
analyzing the time/date stamps of files in conjunction, a detailed usage
pattern can be deduced. A manual method to achieve time/date stamp
modifications is to copy a file from one hard drive to another, and then copy
the file back again. However, the manual method only resets the dates and
times to when the file was re-copied.
RegCleaner (not to be confused with Microsoft's unsupported product
RegClean) is a free program available from www.jv16.org.
Many programs leave behind telltale registry entries when they are
uninstalled. Although not specifically designed as a privacy tool per se, this
product enables a user to search out and eliminate all references to
previously installed programs, thus, denying this information to anyone later
examining the computer. An unintended consequence of this cleaning is that it
allows many shareware programs to be repeatedly reinstalled after their
expiration dates, since these programs use these hidden registry leftovers to
identify which computers have previously installed the shareware.
Encryption and Steganography One disadvantage of encryption is that an encrypted file, folder, or hard
drive can be tantamount to a red flag identifying information as sensitive. An
alternative to encryption that does not have this problem is steganography.
Steganography is concealment of private information within an image or sound
file. A program using this technology called EyeMage is free from: www.proporta.com.
EyeMage's graphical interface makes the encoding/decoding process so very
simple that a small child could easily use it. In certain rare circumstances, the cost of disclosure for private
information might outweigh the cost of the computer on which the data is
stored. Diagrams of not-yet-patented inventions, soon-to-be-published research
results, and confidential client files of doctors or attorneys are just a few
types of materials for which unauthorized disclosure could be catastrophic. In
these situations, you might want to adopt extreme failsafe protection.
Methods for this could range from the use of harmless tricks that put the
computer's software in limbo, to more extreme methods that prevent data
disclosure by permanent destruction of the computer's hardware. In any
instance where data is critical enough to warrant this degree of protection,
it is assumed that you will have properly backed up the data in an alternate
secure location.
Pre-Windows Loop
Windows Self Shut-off To create or remove the shortcut, right click on an unoccupied space of the
Windows desktop. Select New|shortcut. Enter the command line data:
Booby Traps In addition to viruses, programs can also be easily located on the Internet
that will temporarily protect data by deleting a computer's hard drive
partitions. file allocation table, or CMOS settings. Programs such as this can
be exceedingly small. To illustrate; the following program consists of merely
thirteen lines, yet will destroy a computer's file allocation table when
executed from a file built with the Debug program in DOS:
Use of Hardware Self-destruct Mechanisms Other self-destruction techniques are easily imagined, but since they
likely involve flame, loud noises, or dangerous chemicals, they will not be
discussed here.
…A Word of Caution
This group includes co-workers, family members, and hackers/crackers. Their
motivation for accessing personal information could range from professional
jealousy, curiosity, to mistrust or malicious/criminal intent. The methods
employed by individuals are primarily exploitation of inherent system
weaknesses, "social engineering" tactics--such as simply asking for
information that allows access, or use of specialized software tools such as
monitoring programs, password cracking programs or Trojan horse programs.
This group includes any commercial organizations that utilize tools to gather,
analyze, and maintain personal information about individuals without the
individual's knowledge or consent. The techniques used include data mining to
correlate data and deduce previously unknown facts about individuals, using
web page cookies to gather data surreptitiously, and offering software spyware
programs to the public which contain hidden functions to send information
secretly back to the manufacturer. Programs classified as spyware are too
numerous to list, but include such popular programs as: RealPlayer, Download
Accelerator, Comet Cursor, PKZip, Cute FTP, GoZilla, and Kazaa. One extensive
list of spyware infested programs can be viewed at: www.fcenter.ru.
Microsoft uses a tracking device called a Globally Unique Identifier (GUID) in
its Windows Media Player application and many other Microsoft-owned
properties. Alternatively referred to as a "super cookie", it can be
used to secretly track the Web surfing habits of a particular user across MSN,
Hotmail, and Microsoft.com.
This group could include any state or federal agency which does not take its
information management responsibilities seriously, however, the majority of
privacy issues stem from just four federal agencies; the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS), Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), National Security Agency (NSA),
and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
Temporary Files and Hidden Text
Strengthen
and Mask Passwords
Layers Two and Three: Physical Barriers and Firewalls
Of all the various privacy protection methods, barriers are the easiest to
implement. Barrier security is founded upon the simple premise that the fewer
people who have access to a computer system, the less the likelihood that the
system will be subjected to unauthorized access. The physical location of a
computer storing personal information should be in a lockable room, just as
you would lock a desk drawer or file cabinet. If you have more than one
computer you should consider isolating one computer from the Internet and
storing financial records or other private information on the isolated system.
The most proficient hacker/cracker in the world cannot access a system with
which they have absolutely no contact.
Any computer system that accesses the Internet should be equipped with a
firewall to enable the user to detect and prevent unauthorized access to the
computer through the Internet connection. This writer uses the Norton Internet
Security Suite from www.symantec.com
as his primary firewall. This application provides an integrated system for
intrusion attempt detection, blocking advertisements on the Internet,
anti-virus scanning, and privacy filtering to prevent private information like
credit card numbers from being sent out to the Internet. An alternative free
firewall application called "Zone Alarm" can be obtained from www.zonelabs.com.
Your browser keeps a record of which site was just visited, which empowers the
"back" button. The Web sites that you visit can obtain and record
this information. Therefore, if you visit site where anarchy, AIDS, or atheism
are discussed and then proceed to online shopping sites where you complete
order forms, or otherwise divulge your identity, this tracking could lead to
an undesired disclosure of information about your interests. An online
demonstration of this disclosure can be viewed at privacy.net.
Because website tracking occurs invisibly, and mostly on the server side, it
is difficult to detect which websites may be keeping an ongoing record of a
user's activities. One free product that makes this information available to a
user is the Privacy Companion from www.idcide.com.
Activity tracking programs, such as the previously mentioned Spector, can be
detected and deactivated by performing a scan using a product called Who's
Watching Me, available from www.trapware.com.
Battles between the activity loggers and the logger detectors occasionally
erupt, as was the case recently between Who's Watching Me and WinWhatWhere
Investigator.
Layer Four: Trojan, Key Logger, and Spyware Detection
One extremely useful program for Trojan detection is called Trojan Monitor and
is a component of a program called "The Cleaner" from: www.moosoft.com.
Trojan Monitor constantly watches all of the critical system files and
registry settings and will immediately sound an audible alarm and generate a
flashing warning signal if any program attempts to modify these settings.
Trojan monitor will then identify the specific setting that is causing the
alarm and give a user the option of whether or not to allow the change to
proceed. A high-quality freeware alternative for Trojan scanning and removal
is a product called Trojan First Aid Kit (TFAK), available from www.wilders.org.
The leader in spyware detection is a program called Ad -Aware. It is freely
available from www.lavasoftUSA.com,
and the program offers a live update feature to keep its list of spyware
programs current. In a matter of minutes, Ad-Aware can scan the contents of an
entire computer, identify any spyware programs, and offer to delete them. As a
secondary means of confirming a suspected file's status, an online spyware
database is available for searching at: www.spychecker.com.
An old, but free, program called Hook Protect from www.softsecurity.com
scans a computer for any signs of monitoring software. A similar, but more
recent, key logging detection program is called Anti -Key Logger from www.anti-keyloggers.com.
Layer Five: Minimizing Exposed Information
In the event that all of the foregoing methods fail and someone does break
into your machine, you should take steps to limit the information to which the
intruder can have access. This fallback position includes techniques to
securely delete unneeded sensitive information and encrypt sensitive
information that must be retained on the system.
The Windows operating system does not delete files. Even the action of
"emptying" the recycle bin does not cause the files to be destroyed.
Emptying the recycle bin merely marks the disk space storing a document as
available for recording future data. And even if the data is overwritten, it
can still be recovered. Remnants of the old magnetic patterns remain at the
edges of each track, and the disk controller can often be commanded to mis-track
sufficiently to read it. (The appropriate equipment to do this is generally in
the hands of law enforcement and intelligence agencies. Some of the equipment
requires disassembly of the drive.) The data does not become unrecoverable
until it is overwritten many times. Several programs exist to allow users to
accomplish actual deletion of files containing sensitive information. A few of
these are listed below:
The leading encryption product for home use is Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) from www.pgpi.org.
However, use of this product is somewhat complicated and can cause it to go
unused, resulting in no privacy protection whatsoever. After examining various
encryption products, I believe that Silver Key from www.bestcrypto.com
is vastly easier to use and is sufficiently secure. It costs only $19.95 and
allows drag and drop encryption of complete folders using the state-of-the-art
AES encryption algorithm. A freeware version called Iron Key is also
available. It is similarly quick and easy to use, but can only encrypt one
file at a time and uses the DES encryption algorithm that was cracked in 22
hours and 15 minutes at a 1999 contest sponsored by RSA Security.
Layer Six: Scorched Earth Policy
By a simple modification of the Autoexec.bat file, a user can place a computer
into an endless loop that prevents Windows from loading. An instructional CD
by "Canadian Tom" lists the following as a method to accomplish
this. In the autoexec.bat file insert each the following on a separate line:
echo off
Restarting the computer (which is the well-known bypass method for Windows
screensaver passwords) will not bypass this loop. The specific key combination
that breaks the loop will be well known to the technically inclined, but the
average user would not be likely to guess it. The keystrokes cannot be
ascertained by keystroke logging programs, which start only after
Windows is loaded. But this technique can be bypassed easily by booting the
machine from a floppy disk. Of course, even a technically astute person may
not realize at first that access is being denied by something as old and
primitive as a batch file.
cls
:loop
echo "Unauthorized Access Attempt Detected ! System Halted."
pause
goto loop
With this method, you create a desktop shortcut that forces Windows to shut
off and place the shortcut within the Windows startup sequence. If an
unauthorized user attempts to start the computer, Windows will shut the
machine off during the startup sequence and access to the system will be
delayed or denied completely depending upon the intruder's level of expertise
with Windows.
c:\windows\rundll.exe user.exe,exitwindows
Then drag and drop the new shortcut into the Start Menu's Programs|Startup
folder. To deactivate this shutdown sequence, press F5 during the startup to
initiate a "safe mode" startup, then delete the shortcut from its
location in the startup folder.
One method of preventing an unauthorized person from having free rein to
perform a methodical search of a computer system is to make use of
"live" viruses to create a land-mine effect. As a quick search of
the Internet demonstrates, viruses can be freely downloaded from Internet
sources such as www.hackerscenter.com.
These viruses can be interspersed among the files and folders containing
critical information, and will present no danger to the computer system as
long as they are not clicked or executed. However, an antivirus program with
real-time file protection might detect the viruses and quarantine them, which
would negate their purpose. For this reason, this method would require that
anti-virus software be deactivated when the computer is unattended.
f 200
Although this technique renders the disk unreadable via the file system, all
of the sectors of data are still there, and can be retrieved with absolute
track reads. Reassembling the noncontiguous data might be akin to putting a
smashed stained glass window back together, but it is possible. This program
could be modified slightly to overwrite the entire disk, but in any event,
don't try this at home--or at work.
L200 0 Information Technology Abuse 20
a 100
mov ax,301
mov bx,200
mov cx,1
mov dx,0080
int 13
int 3
rcx ae
n anyname.com
w
q
Computer storage media consist primarily of magnetically aligned particles
located on disks within a hard drive. For this reason, any strong magnetic
field can rapidly destroy large amounts of stored data. Devices known as
degaussers are routinely used for this purpose. Although some degaussers cost
less than $100, they're typically suited only for demagnetizing a CRT monitor
or erasing video and audio tapes. The magnetic flux densities at the
read-write head are extremely high, and are concentrated onto a very small
area of the disk. A degausser capable of erasing a hard disk can be purchased
from www.datadev.com, but
the prices start at $1000 and go up from there. The devices that are small
enough to be hidden inside a computer's casing adjacent to the hard drive are
unlikely to be powerful enough to erase the hard disk. It's possible that a
commercial degausser could be built into a tower case, but you would have to
test the efficacy of this approach on an expendable drive.
These scorched-earth techniques may seem attractive because they contain a
measure of retribution. But just as having a gun in the house is statistically
far more likely to wound or kill a family member than protect you against a
burglar, implementing these techniques increases the probability that you will
become a victim of your own cleverness.
Return
Back To The Maximum Security Section Main Start Page
And Check Out The Rest Of Our Security Data To Keep You Safe!