Tag Archive | "hacking"

Is Your Computer Repair Shop Hacking Your Computer?

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Passwords, Financial Documents, log-in details for social sites, vacation and private photographs, contracts…. we all have them on our computers.

Well, what happens when your computer crashes and you continue to have problems? If you are not a computer technician, you take them in to get fixed. Right?

Well you might have second thoughts after reading this.

“Some computer repair shops are illegally accessing personal data on customers’ hard drives - and even trying to hack their bank accounts, a Sky News investigation has found. “

“In one case, passwords, log-in details and vacation photographs were all copied onto a portable memory stick by a technician. In other shops, customers were charged for non-existent  work and simple faults were misdiagnosed.”

Engineers from the Sky News investigation team set up an easily diagnosable and fixable problem by “loosening the connection of the internal memory chip”, which prevented the Windows OS to load. All that had to be done to get the computer working again was to simply pushing the chip back into position.

The investigation targeted six different computer repair shops and all of them misdiagnosed or overcharged for the fault but one.

“The most serious offender was Revival Computers in Hammersmith, West London. Shortly after identifying the real fault, an engineer called our undercover reporter to say the computer needed a new motherboard, which would cost $200.”

“The surveillance software then recorded one technician browsing through the files on the hard drive, including private documents and intimate vacation photos, including some of our researcher in her bikini.”

After this incident, Revival Computers had its membership in Britain’s Professional Computing Association suspended.

The U.S. Council of Better Business Bureaus said it received 1,595 complaints regarding computer service and repair in 2008, a 23 percent jump from the previous year.

“This is one of those industries — like auto repair — where you have to trust that the technician is being honest… With a computer technician, there’s a larger threat of identity theft or other violations of privacy.”

Make a few calls around to see if you have any connections before you take your stuff in to a stranger. It’s always better to take a little bit longer than rushing and winding up with some issues… technical, or financial.

Check out the original article - Exposed: Repair Shops Hack Your Laptops

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Lori Drew the MySpace Hoax Mom: Prosecutors Seeking Prison

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A couple months ago I posted the cyber-bullying case involving Lori Drew. Drew, her then-13-year-old daughter, and a business associate created a MySpace profile of a fictitious boy and sent flirtatious messages to Megan Meier in the boy’s name to find out if Megan was spreading rumors about Drew’s daughter…

“The fake boy then dumped Megan in a message saying the world would be better without her.”

Megan Meier hung herself shortly after.

“Prosecutors charged Drew with four felony counts, but jurors rejected these for the lesser misdemeanor convictions and deadlocked on a fourth felony charge for conspiracy.”

They also rejected a recommendation from probation officers that Drew be given only probation and a $5,000 fine.

“The defendant has become the face of cyber-bullying. A probationary sentence might embolden others to use the Internet to torment and exploit children,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Mark Krause said in court documents.

Prosecutors argued that Drew sought to humiliate Megan, who she knew suffered from depression and was suicidal. They also said Drew tried to conceal the scheme after Megan died and avoided taking responsibility.”

All in all the prosecutors want Lori Drew to serve over at least 3 years in prison and $300,000 in fines.

Drew was not directly charged with causing Megan’s death, but,  prosecutors did indict her under the federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Act,  in what is believed to be the nation’s first case of using this law related to cyber-bullying. In the past, the law has been used in hacking and trademark theft cases.

To view the original article, click here and here.

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SmartRules provides step by step guides to local rules and civil procedure for state courts & federal courts throughout the country.

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