Monday, December 9, 2013

Spying On You?

Most laptop computers, pads, and the monitors that come with desk top computers have a built-in camera.  It's that little thing above the top of the screen, and sometimes there is a small light source and microphone near it.  The camera is a handy thing if you use Skype.  The people with whom you are skyping appear on your screen and your face appears on theirs.  It's a remarkable way of seeing people who are hundreds or thousands of miles away.

It's also a remarkable way for the FBI and hackers to spy on you.
The US government has been able to secretly spy on its citizens through their computer’s webcams for several years, it has been revealed.
The FBI has long been able to activate a computer’s camera without triggering the ‘recording light’ to let the owner know the webcam is on, a former assistant director of its tech division has said.
 The FBI uses the same technique to gain access to your computers that hackers use: Phishing.
The FBI team use the same technique as ratters, by infecting the computer with a malicious software – ‘malware – through phishing.  By sending an email with a link, which could be to a website, an image or a video, the user is tricked into downloading a small piece of software onto their machine.
Once installed, the malware allows the FBI to take control of the computer and the webcam at any time, working similarly to the system large corporations use to update software and fix IT problems.
We have rights to protect our privacy, right?  The FBI needs to obtain a warrant, the same as it has to do if it wants to place a tap on a telephone.
‘We have transitioned into a world where law enforcement is hacking into people’s computers, and we have never had public debate,’ Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist for the American Civil Liberties Union told the Post.  ‘Judges are having to make up these powers as they go along.’
Non-governmental hackers are called Rats.  Ratting is the hacking of people's computers in order to capture photographs of them, and then enslave them into sending more photos, or face having their photos made public.
Slaves can be male or female, but since the majority hackers looking for slaves seem to be heterosexual males, the slaves themselves tend to be young women.  These slaves have no idea they're being tracked, watched, and followed any time they are online.
We take out laptops everywhere these days.  Hell, I know I had mine in the bathroom as I showered and got ready on several occasions.
People have no idea that they are being watched by someone around the corner, or around the world.  And that there is a market for what can be seen through your camera.
They sell the youngest slaves to the pedophiles, the men to the gay crowd, and there's a market for those outliers.  For instance, cops. There's always a buyer
 Here's a simple, low-tech way of preventing your computer camera from spying on you for a cost of less than five cents: Place a small piece of black electrical tape over your computer's camera.  Threat neutralized.

By the way, the hacking isn't limited to computers.  If your habit is to listen to music over your cell phone while you're getting dressed, you are vulnerable to the same kind of hacking.

14 comments:

The Dude said...

I put a piece of tape over the lens - yeah, that might be paranoid, but they are out to get us.

bagoh20 said...

I pity the fool that spies on me in private.

No, seriously, I pity them. It has to be horrible. I try not look myself. It can be heart breaking.

Michael Haz said...

I need to figure out this spying business. Could be interesting.

Evi L. Bloggerlady said...

So if you are going to masturbate on line, it is probably best to put a piece of tape over the little camera thingy on your computer?

And clean your keyboard and mouse afterwards.

I am just throwing that out to Meade when he is checking on dog photos on line.

Palladian said...

The "ratting" thing sounds like complete nonsense made up by a reporter desperate to spice up a story.

Get a Mac, or like Sixty Grit suggests, a piece of black electrical tape, and you won't have to worry about this.

Icepick said...

We have rights to protect our privacy, right?

Only if you want an abortion.

Icepick said...

I suggest taping a coin over the lens. That definitely won't allow anything through. Or better still, get a tiny picture of an asshole, the nastier looking the better, and a little shadowbox type set-up, and arrange them so that anyone attempting to spy on you via camera will be looking at some nasty asshole instead.

Or use a picture of POTUS. Your call.

Icepick said...
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ampersand said...
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Aridog said...

...Jesus was not talking to...Mary Baker Eddy, ...

Whew! Certainly glad we got that cleared up.

Dust Bunny Queen said...

I have a camera that needs to be connected to the USB port. It is only plugged in when I want to Skype. If I had a built in camera a piece of paper or tape over the lens would be installed.

Birches said...

I knew all of this before. Don't you guys watch Person of Interest?

AllenS said...

Draw a picture of a gun, and tape that over the camera lens.

rhhardin said...

If there's a camera, if you disable it "do not use this device" that programs run faster.

The camera eats up cycles whether anything's using it or not.