- Chinese Internet censorship: An inside look
- Desktops of the future here today
- What network CEOs really make
- DoD sold counterfeit network gear
- Sci-Fi's goofiest gadgets and technology
Crackin' the Kraken bot. Listen now!
Wireless dangers at airports. Listen now!
The movement towards laptop computers has fueled an unprecedented number of data breaches. For IT and Information Security, encryption and training has proven ineffective against careless users and insider threats. This paper discusses these limitations and explains how endpoint security allows remote deletion of sensitive data, tracking of computers outside the network and the physical recovery of missing computers. Learn how you can ensure mobile data protection regardless of end-user interference.
Get the latest on storage technologies that allow IT professionals to better cope with new IT demands. Learn how storage technologies can help you successfully tackle e-Discover, regulatory compliance, green data center initiatives and the data explosion. Get all the details now.
HP's Network Lifestyle Management can help you automate network processes and improve NOC efficiency. This webinar is part three of a four part series on Business Services Management (BSM) evolution to help you better align IT with business objectives. Register for this on-demand webcast now.
Ok, I've been living here for 10 months. The text touched on the fact that there is no uprising or backlash...- Anonymous
An employee looking to steal confidential information from his employer sneaks into what should be a secure back room after hours. He pulls charts and files from a top-level financial meeting and slides them into his briefcase before heading back out.
What the insider doesn't know is that his shoes picked up hundreds of tiny RFID chips that had been scattered across the floor. As he passes by an RFID reader near the front door of his office building, security will be alerted that he had accessed a secure area. The evidence is all over the soles of his shoes.
Sound a little like a scene from a James Bond movie? It's not.
Nox Defense, an arm of SimplyRFID, has created what it's calling an invisible perimeter defense system designed to track things and people in real time - all without their knowledge. The system that is made up of several technological pieces -- RFID chips the size of grains of sand, and an RFID and video camera surveillance system.
"The key to an effective surveillance system is intelligence in the equipment itself," said Carl Brown, president of Nox Defense. "It does no good to install a thousand video cameras if a thousand people have to watch them all day? Everybody is doing surveillance nowadays everywhere. They just don't have a setup that tells them what is important video to look at. RFID technology will tell you when something was moved, where it was moved and then you can check the corresponding video."
Brown explained that the RFID chips, or spy chips, are perfect for what he calls clandestine surveillance. The RFID readers can be hidden in an office building or warehouse, and the RFID tags can be placed on company products or property -- and even on employee name tags or ID badges. Thieves, intruders and even personnel see nothing of the tracking system.
If an employee in the warehouse walks off with a plasma TV or loads seven instead of five computers into the delivery truck, it can be tracked with the RFID technology. And since the RFID chips will tell security what time the equipment was moved, the company can check the digital video archives for that time and that section of the warehouse.