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Corporations are woefully unprepared to counter attempts at corporate espionage, say experts who perform vulnerability assessments designed to uncover security weaknesses. U.S. corporations lose as much as $300 billion a year to hacking, cracking, physical security breaches and other criminal activity, according to Ira Winkler, author of Spies Among Us (Wiley, 2005) and president of the Internet Security Advisors Group, which performs espionage simulations and provides other services.
Although espionage is usually associated with high-tech approaches involving wireless security breaches and zombified PCs, low-tech tactics such as walking into a building are common, says Johnny Long, a security researcher at Computer Sciences Corp. and author of No-Tech Hacking (Syngress, 2008).
"To me, computers are irrelevant," Winkler says. "It's about what data do I want, what form does it take, and how can I steal it?"
Any company can be a target, says Peter Wood, chief of operations at First Base Technologies, a U.K.-based consultancy that performs ethical hacking services. Spies are interested in anything from financial data to intellectual property and customer data. They might steal information for blackmail purposes, but "the most common motive for physical intrusion is industrial espionage," he says.
Here are several of the most common ploys and the countermeasures you can put into place to spot -- and possibly even stop -- the work of a spy.
Tailgating
One of the most disturbingly successful ways for outsiders to infiltrate an organization is also the least high-tech: following an authorized employee through the front door. "In 90% of the companies I've worked with, it's so simple to get in, it's pathetic," Winkler says. To blend in, the spy might hold a cup of coffee or a sandwich, dress in a suit minus the jacket or even wear a counterfeit badge.
Antismoking regulations have also made it simple to sneak into buildings through the back door, where smokers tend to huddle, Wood adds. And Long claims to have walked right through delivery or loading dock doors.
Once they're inside, spies have lots of ways to access sensitive information. They can pose as IT support personnel, photocopying papers they find on unattended desks or at printers. Or they can just walk into an empty meeting room, plug in a laptop and pull data off the network. In that scenario, a convincing ploy is for spies to work in pairs, with one posing as a consultant and the other as an employee, says Wood, who has used that tactic. If someone enters the room, Wood says he apologizes for the "double-booking" and moves on. "It's just a matter of having the right attitude and being confident," he says.
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Comments (3)
Security ?By Li on May 2, 2008, 9:50 amSpy that's funny, I can buy an existing employee with any data needed or wanted! Raptor 22 anyone?
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Spot and stop a spy? Not a good one.By Noah Schiffman on April 23, 2008, 12:44 amSome good tips and guidelines, but in the world of big business, relatively useless. As a former black hat who specialized in corporate espionage (see my NWW blog--Security...
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good oneBy krisi on April 17, 2008, 1:11 pmgood one.. Its really easy to get into many of the offices.But stealing the data, hmm is kinda difficult i think. yeah it depends on what kind of data is being targeted,...
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