New ‘Terahertz’ Scanner Lets Mobile Phones See Through Walls
  • Scanner uses ‘terahertz’ spectrum - between infrared and microwaves
  • Can see through walls, wood and plastics
  • Doctors could use small, cheap devices to see tumours inside body

Comic-book superpowers could become reality as scientists have designed a phone that works as ‘X-Ray spex’.

A hi-tech chip allows a phone to ‘see through’ walls, wood and plastics - and (although the researchers are coy about this) through fabrics such as clothing.

Doctors could also use the imagers to look inside the body for cancer tumours without damaging X-Rays or large, expensive MRI scanners.

[caption id=”attachment_6305” align=”aligncenter” width=”468” caption=”A hi-tech chip allows a phone to ‘see through’ walls, wood and plastics - and (although the researchers are coy about this) through fabrics such as clothing)”][/caption]

[caption id=”attachment_6306” align=”aligncenter” width=”468” caption=”Close up of a CMOS chip - a new version of the commonly used chips would allow users to capture images ‘through’ walls and even inside the human body”][/caption]

The researchers claim it could allow DIYers to detect studs within walls, or allow businesses to detect counterfeit money.

At present, it’s designed to work over a short range - and works with a normal-sized microchip that could fit into phones or other handheld electronics.

The team’s research involves tapping into an unused range in the electromagnetic spectrum. 

But the terahertz band of the electromagnetic spectrum, one of the wavelength ranges that falls between microwave and infrared, has not been accessible for most consumer devices.

‘We’ve created approaches that open a previously untapped portion of the electromagnetic spectrum for consumer use and life-saving medical applications,’ said Dr. Kenneth O, professor of electrical engineering at UT Dallas.

‘The terahertz range is full of unlimited potential that could benefit us all.’

[caption id=”attachment_6307” align=”aligncenter” width=”468” caption=”X-ray spex? At present, it’s designed to work over a short range - and works with a normal-sized microchip that could fit into phones or other handheld electronics”][/caption]

Using the new approach, images can be created with signals operating in the terahertz (THz) range without having to use several lenses inside a device. This could reduce overall size and cost.

The second advance that makes the findings applicable for consumer devices is the technology used to create the microchip.

Chips manufactured using CMOS (Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor) technology form the basis of many consumer electronic devices used in daily life such as personal computers, smart phones, high definition TV and game consoles.

‘CMOS is affordable and can be used to make lots of chips,’ Dr. O said. ‘The combination of CMOS and terahertz means you could put this chip and receiver on the back of a cellphone, turning it into a device carried in your pocket that can see through objects.’

Due to privacy concerns, Dr. O and his team are focused on uses in the distance range of less than four inches.

Consumer applications of such technology could range from finding studs in walls to authentication of important documents. Businesses could use it to detect counterfeit money.

Manufacturing companies could apply it to process control.

There are also more communication channels available in terahertz than the range currently used for wireless communication, so information could be more rapidly shared at this frequency.

Terahertz can also be used for imaging to detect cancer tumors, diagnosing disease through breath analysis, and monitoring air toxicity.

‘There are all kinds of things you could be able to do that we just haven’t yet thought about,’ said Dr. O, holder of the Texas Instruments Distinguished Chair.
The research was presented at the most recent International Solid-State Circuits Conference (ISSCC). The team will work next to build an entire working imaging system based on the CMOS terahertz system.

By Rob Waugh

PUBLISHED: 02:50 EST, 19 April 2012 | UPDATED: 03:03 EST, 19 April 2012

Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2131932/The-REAL-X-Ray-spex—new-terahertz-scanner-lets-mobile-phones-walls.html

How to secure your computer and surf fully Anonymous BLACK-HAT STYLE

This is a guide with which even a total noob can get high class security for his system and complete anonymity online. But its not only for noobs, it contains a lot of tips most people will find pretty helpfull. It is explained so detailed even the biggest noobs can do it^^ :

=== The Ultimate Guide for Anonymous and Secure Internet Usage v1.0.1 ===

Table of Contents:

  1.   Obtaining Tor Browser
  2.   Using and Testing Tor Browser for the first time
  3.   Securing Your Hard Drive
  4.   Setting up TrueCrypt, Encrypted Hidden Volumes
  5.   Testing TrueCrypt Volumes
  6.   Securing your Hard Disk
  7.   Temporarily Securing Your Disk, Shredding Free Space
  8.   Installing VirtualBox
  9.   Installing a Firewall
  10.   Firewall Configuration
  11.   Installing Ubuntu
  12.   Ubuntu Initial Setup
  13.   Installing Guest Additions
  14.   Installing IRC (Optional)
  15.   Installing Torchat (Optional)
  16.   Creating TOR-Only Internet Environment
  17.   General Daily Usage

By the time you are finished reading and implementing this guide, you will be able to securely and anonymously browse any website and to do so anonymously. No one not even your ISP or a government agent will be able to see what you are doing online. If privacy and anonymity is important to you, then you owe it to yourself to follow the instructions that are presented here.

In order to prepare this guide for you, I have used a computer that is running Windows Vista. This guide will work equally well for other versions of Windows. If you use a different operating system, you may need to have someone fluent in that operating system guide you through this process. However, most parts of the process are easily duplicated in other operating systems.

I have written this guide to be as newbie friendly as possible. Every step is fully detailed and explained. I have tried to keep instructions explicit as possible. This way, so long as you patiently follow each step, you will be just fine.

In this guide from time to time you will be instructed to go to certain URLs to download files. You do NOT need TOR to get these files, and using TOR (while possible) will make these downloads very slow.

This guide may appear overwhelming. Every single step is explained thoroughly and it is just a matter of following along until you are done. Once you are finished, you will have a very secure setup and it will be well worth the effort. Even though the guide appears huge, this whole process should take at the most a few hours. You can finish it in phases over the course of several days.

It is highly recommended that you close *ALL* applications running on your computer before starting.

SOURCE:
http://www.cyberguerrilla.org/?p=3322

FBI Spyware: How Does the CIPAV Work? — UPDATE

Fbi_logo_2

Following up on my story on the FBI’s computer-monitoring malware, the most interesting question unanswered in the FBI affidavit (.pdf) is how the bureau gets its “Computer and Internet Protocol Address Verifier” onto a target PC.

In the Josh Glazebrook case, the FBI sent its program specifically to Glazebrook’s then-anonymous MySpace profile, Timberlinebombinfo. The attack is described this way:

The CIPAV will be deployed through an electronic messaging program from an account controlled by the FBI. The computers sending and receiving the CIPAV data will be machines controlled by the FBI.  The electronic message deploying the CIPAV will only be directed to the administrator(s) of the “Timberinebombinfo” account.

It’s possible that the FBI used social engineering to trick Glazebrook into downloading and executing the malicious code by hand — but given the teen’s hacker proclivities, it seems unlikely he’d fall for a ruse like that. More likely the FBI used a software vulnerability, either a published one that Glazebrook hadn’t patched against, or one that only the FBI knows.

MySpace has an internal instant messaging system, and a web-based stored messaging system. (Contrary to one report, MySpace doesn’t offer e-mail, so we can rule out an executable attachment.) Since there’s no evidence the CIPAV was crafted specifically to target MySpace, my money is on a browser or plug-in hole, activated through the web-based stored messaging system, which allows one MySpace user to send a message to another’s inbox. The message can include HTML and embedded image tags.

There are several such holes to choose from. There’s an old hole — patched early last year  — in the way Windows renders WMF (Windows Metafile) images. Cyber crooks are still using it to install keyloggers, adware and spyware on vulnerable machines.  Last year it even popped up in an attack on MySpace users delivered through an ad banner.

Roger Thompson, CTO of security vendor Exploit Prevention Labs, says he’d bet on the fresher Windows animated cursor vulnerability, which was discovered being exploited by Chinese hackers last March, “and was quickly picked up by all the blackhats everywhere,” he says.

For a couple weeks, there wasn’t even a patch available for the animated cursor hole — in  April, Microsoft rushed one out.  But, of course, not everybody jumps on every Windows security update, and this hole remains one of the most popular browser bugs among black hats today, he says.

There are also holes in Apple’s QuickTime browser plug-in — fixing it means downloading and reinstalling QuickTime. Like the animated cursor hole, some of the QuickTime vulns allow an attacker to gain complete control of a machine remotely. “They might have embedded something in a QuickTime movie or something,” says Thompson.

If you have any theories, let me know. (If you know something for certain, there’s THREAT LEVEL’s secure feedback form) .

 

Update:

Greg Shipley, CTO of security consultancy Neohapsis, says it’s no surprise that anti-virus software didn’t protect Glazebrook (assuming he even ran any). Without a sample of the FBI’s code from which to build a signature, AV software would have a tough time spotting it.

Some of the more “heuristic” techniques that profile application behavior might flag it … maybe. However, IMO one of the most basic signs of good Windows Trojan design is an awareness of installed packages and default browsers, both alluded to in the text.  If the trojan is browser-aware (and in turn, potentially proxy-aware) and HTTP is used as the transport protocol, heh, you’re pretty fscked.  That’s the makings of a great covert-communications channel, and one that will do quite nicely in 99.9% of the environments out there …

In short, stock AV probably isn’t gonna flag this thing unless they got a copy of it and built a sig, neither of which is likely.

Egypt: How companies help the government spy on activists

A project of Global Voices Online, we seek to build a global anti-censorship network of bloggers and online activists dedicated to protecting freedom of expression and free access to information online. Learn more »

عربي · مصر: كيف تساعد الشركات الحكومة على التجسس على النشطاء Malagasy · Ejipta: Manampy ny governemanta mitsikilo ny mafana fo ireo orinasa Magyar · Egyiptom: Magáncégek segítenék a kormányt a kémkedésben Español · Egipto: Compañías ayudan al gobierno a espiar a los activistas Français · Egypte: Comment les firmes des NTIC aident à espionner les militants Aymara · Egipto: Yaqha jilat masinakaw Guwirnurux yanapapxi aktiwistanakaru wilaña Written byRamy Raoof

One of the demands of the Egyptian revolution was to demolish one of the well-known security services for torture, grave human rights violations and spying on activists which is the State Security Investigations (SSI) and to have its officers set onto trials.

Few weeks ago when authorities didn’t respond immediately to people’s demand, many Egyptians stormed SSI headquarters to protect the evidences against SSI offices (including torture equipments and documents). Among those documents where communications between SSI units related to censorship, monitoring online content, controlling computes/ laptops, as well as shutting down communications services.

Those SSI leaks provides many information that I believe all individuals and entities working on right to privacy and freedom of expression and other relevant fields should understand and be aware of.

Since the first 6 April Strike in Egypt in 2008, security agencies and units decided to pay more attention to activist’s communications online and via their cell phones. The SSI established an Emergency Unit, among its roles to:

  • Cut-off the internet in a city, governorate or several ones.
  • Block particulate websites.
  • Get information about netiznes.
  • Shutdown mobile services in telecommunication companies.
  • Shutdown Bulk-SMS services.
  • Make sure telecommunications companies can quickly respond to requests by security authorities.

The SSI did several meetings in the presence of representatives from Ministry of Interior, General Intelligence, Ministry of Defense, Ministry of Mass Communication, Ministry of Communications & Information Technology, and the three Telecommunications Companies in Egypt (Vodafone, Mobinil, Etisalat).

In 2009 -and maybe earlier- communications was established from a European-based company with its headquarters in the United Kingdom called Gamma Group International with SSI in Egypt offering them a software that SSI units describe in their internal communications in August 2009 as “high-level security system that have capabilities not provided in other systems, most prominent capabilities is hacking into personal Skype accounts, hacking email accounts associated with Hotmail, Yahoo and Gmail, completely control targeted computers” and in another communication in December 2010 “record audio and video chats, record activity taking place around hacked computers with cameras and take copies of its content”.

In those communications between SSI units, the price of the software which is called Finfisher is mentioned to be for 2 million Egyptian pounds.

Here is how Gamma Group International describes itself on their websiteprovides advanced technical surveillance and monitoring solutions and international consultancy to National and State Intelligence Departments and Law Enforcement Agencies.

The most recent communication was a report issued on 1 January 2011 by an IT unit in the SSI after trying a free-trial version of the software.

These kinds of programs developed by Gamma International and similar companies are simply enabling governments and security agencies in the ruling regimes to violate anyone’s privacy, monitor anyone’s activity and impose censorship. Consequently, helping the governments to fabricate cases against political activists and human rights defenders on charges like “destabilize order”, “defaming state leaders”, “spreading rumors to overthrow the regime” and many other charges that regimes set to minimize the work of civil societies and activists towards better human rights situations.

The same situation with the Telecommunications companies in Egypt whom cooperated with Mubarak’s regime to provide information about activists and disable services.

You can read and download the SSI leaks addressed in this post through this links:

  • - State Security Internal Communications About Finfisher – Link [Arabic].
  • - Commercial Offer from Gamma International to State Security – Link [English]
  • - State Security Internal Communications on Monitoring SMS – Link [Arabic]
Hidden Advances in Technology
Free Energy isnt just a fairly tale.  We can smash atoms at light speed,  but we still can’t design and mass-produce a cheap electric  car.. Seriously?

Hidden Advances in Technology

Free Energy isnt just a fairly tale. We can smash atoms at light speed, but we still can’t design and mass-produce a cheap electric car.. Seriously?