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'[OT] Legally stealing my data?'
2008\05\02@043208
by
Tamas Rudnai
2008\05\02@045324
by
Shawn Tan
On Friday 02 May 2008 09:31:37 Tamas Rudnai wrote:
> If this is true probably I will never visit US, that would have been far
> too much.
>
> http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/05/01/electronic_searches_at_us_borders/
I would think that the easiest way to work around this is to just encrypt and
upload the information you need, and download it after you cross the border.
You can then just bring along a laptop, which has nothing personal on it.
Cheers.
--
with metta,
Shawn Tan
Aeste Works (M) Sdn Bhd - Engineering Elegance
http://www.aeste.net
2008\05\02@051607
by
Jinx
2008\05\02@052034
by
Tamas Rudnai
Exactly! That's why I could not understand them. A serious terrorist always
could avoid this kind of security checkings, but a legitimate person like us
would always suffer. You can encrypt data on laptop too, but if you refuse
giving out of your password, then they do not let you in the US plus keep
your laptop - I think that's more than illegal, that's against all the human
rights.
On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 9:53 AM, Shawn Tan <spam_OUTshawn.tanTakeThisOuT
aeste.net> wrote:
{Quote hidden}> On Friday 02 May 2008 09:31:37 Tamas Rudnai wrote:
> > If this is true probably I will never visit US, that would have been far
> > too much.
> >
> >
>
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/05/01/electronic_searches_at_us_borders/
>
> I would think that the easiest way to work around this is to just encrypt
> and
> upload the information you need, and download it after you cross the
> border.
> You can then just bring along a laptop, which has nothing personal on it.
>
> Cheers.
>
> --
> with metta,
> Shawn Tan
>
> Aeste Works (M) Sdn Bhd - Engineering Elegance
>
http://www.aeste.net
> -
2008\05\02@053058
by
Apptech
>> If this is true probably I will never visit US, that
>> would have been far
>> too much.
>>
>> http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/05/01/electronic_searches_at_us_borders/
>
> I would think that the easiest way to work around this is
> to just encrypt and
> upload the information you need, and download it after you
> cross the border.
> You can then just bring along a laptop, which has nothing
> personal on it.
This seems to assume that downloaded data is safe from
intrusion. As it also crossed the border on the way in, and
as it is trivially easy to copy it at the rate that it comes
in at (unlike the data on a laptop*) then why should it be
considered secure?
Russell
* A laptop with a full 120 GB hard disk transfers data
through customs at about 33 MB/second, give or take a factor
of 2 to 4 in some cases.
2008\05\02@054718
by
Shawn Tan
|
On Friday 02 May 2008 10:28:27 Apptech wrote:
> > I would think that the easiest way to work around this is
> > to just encrypt and
> > upload the information you need, and download it after you
> > cross the border.
> > You can then just bring along a laptop, which has nothing
> > personal on it.
>
> This seems to assume that downloaded data is safe from
> intrusion. As it also crossed the border on the way in, and
> as it is trivially easy to copy it at the rate that it comes
> in at (unlike the data on a laptop*) then why should it be
> considered secure?
Hmm, because it's encrypted? The problem with crossing the border with
encrypted data on your laptop is that they can compel you to reveal your
password. Downloading your data after, just removes all the hassle. Forcing
the government to devote it's time to breaking strong encryption to get at
your vacation photos, is probably fun too.
--
with metta,
Shawn Tan
Aeste Works (M) Sdn Bhd - Engineering Elegance
http://www.aeste.net
2008\05\02@055146
by
Tamas Rudnai
There are three major differences on copying my data from a laptop or from
the data stream on the internet:
1. From the internet there is no immediate association to me as a person -
if anything suspicious information discovered, then they start investigating
who was this person who sent it or received it.
2. I am NOT sending my financial information, my source of my propriety
firmware or anything in a way that someone else could read it. I use gpg
with 256 aes or maybe twofish. And I do not give them my password, if they
want to see it, work for that hard at least and break it first.
3. And finally, they would not refuse entering to the country because of
encrypted data is sent over the net...
What will they do if someone writes a malware spreading and infecting
computers, then storing some encrypted information on it, and when one or
more arrived in the target country as soon as it attached to the net it
sends the sensitive data to the target server? If my computer is infected
like this and they discover I would not be able to give them the password as
I simply do not have, so they will refuse me to enter and keep my laptop so
I will loose everything? Money, work and even my reputation... Next they
even will hang me because of this?
On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 10:28 AM, Apptech <.....apptechKILLspam
@spam@paradise.net.nz> wrote:
{Quote hidden}> >> If this is true probably I will never visit US, that
> >> would have been far
> >> too much.
> >>
> >>
> www.theregister.co.uk/2008/05/01/electronic_searches_at_us_borders/
> >
> > I would think that the easiest way to work around this is
> > to just encrypt and
> > upload the information you need, and download it after you
> > cross the border.
> > You can then just bring along a laptop, which has nothing
> > personal on it.
>
> This seems to assume that downloaded data is safe from
> intrusion. As it also crossed the border on the way in, and
> as it is trivially easy to copy it at the rate that it comes
> in at (unlike the data on a laptop*) then why should it be
> considered secure?
>
>
>
> Russell
>
> * A laptop with a full 120 GB hard disk transfers data
> through customs at about 33 MB/second, give or take a factor
> of 2 to 4 in some cases.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> -
2008\05\02@060233
by
Alan B. Pearce
> I would think that the easiest way to work around this is
> to just encrypt and
> upload the information you need, and download it after you
> cross the border.
> You can then just bring along a laptop, which has nothing
> personal on it.
As others have noted here, the security agencies can (and do) un-encrypt the
data as it goers by and check its contents. There have been mentions here in
the past about password protected zip files attached to emails getting time
delayed in transit - I cannot remember if it was days or weeks that they
were delayed, but the time stamps on the mail headers showed it was when
crossing the US borders.
A better way would be to put the data on a flash card, USB or CF (I saw an
announcement for a 32GB CF card recently) and stuff that in your shoe while
going through customs. A CF card would fit nicely in a convenient slot in
the heel while going through customs.
2008\05\02@075204
by
Michael Rigby-Jones
|
> -----Original Message-----
> From: piclist-bounces
KILLspammit.edu [.....piclist-bouncesKILLspam
.....mit.edu] On
Behalf
{Quote hidden}> Of Alan B. Pearce
> Sent: 02 May 2008 11:02
> To: Microcontroller discussion list - Public.
> Subject: Re: [OT] Legally stealing my data?
>
> > I would think that the easiest way to work around this is
> > to just encrypt and
> > upload the information you need, and download it after you
> > cross the border.
> > You can then just bring along a laptop, which has nothing
> > personal on it.
>
> As others have noted here, the security agencies can (and do)
un-encrypt
> the
> data as it goers by and check its contents. There have been mentions
here
> in
> the past about password protected zip files attached to emails getting
> time
> delayed in transit - I cannot remember if it was days or weeks that
they
> were delayed, but the time stamps on the mail headers showed it was
when
> crossing the US borders.
>
> A better way would be to put the data on a flash card, USB or CF (I
saw an
> announcement for a 32GB CF card recently) and stuff that in your shoe
> while
> going through customs. A CF card would fit nicely in a convenient slot
in
> the heel while going through customs.
If it was discovered during an XRAY etc, it would look far worse
however!
Mike
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2008\05\02@075519
by
Apptech
> A better way would be to put the data on a flash card, USB
> or CF (I saw an
> announcement for a 32GB CF card recently) and stuff that
> in your shoe while
> going through customs. A CF card would fit nicely in a
> convenient slot in
> the heel while going through customs.
You may not have had the same experiences that I have had
going through customs :-).
On at least some occasions they WOULD have found something
in my shoe heel.
And when that happens you are liable to have them ending up
looking in a few others places for stuff "just in case" as
well.
Russell
2008\05\02@075519
by
Apptech
> 3. And finally, they would not refuse entering to the
> country because of
> encrypted data is sent over the net...
Entering, no, you're already there.
Leaving ... . Now that may be different :-)
R
2008\05\02@081852
by
Alan B. Pearce
>You may not have had the same experiences that I have had
>going through customs :-).
>On at least some occasions they WOULD have found something
>in my shoe heel.
>And when that happens you are liable to have them ending up
>looking in a few others places for stuff "just in case" as
>well.
Yes, but was that entering or leaving the country? I am thinking you only
need to hide it when entering, and AFAIK the shoe inspection is only on
leaving a country.
2008\05\02@082232
by
Tamas Rudnai
> Entering, no, you're already there.
> Leaving ... . Now that may be different :-)
I think they afraid more of illegal emigrants, so if you just say "I came
here for work and better life and will bring my family here too as soon as
possible" you will be in your home country before you could finish this
sentence :-)
Tamas
--
Rudonix DoubleSaver
http://www.rudonix.com
2008\05\02@082322
by
Jinx
> > A CF card would fit nicely in a convenient slot in the heel
> > while going through customs.
>
> If it was discovered during an XRAY etc, it would look far
> worse however!
These lead boots ? Why they's exercise boots sir
2008\05\02@083759
by
Jinx
> illegal emigrants
There's an interesting concept (although there are more than a
few countries who'd rather their residents didn't bunk off to a
better life)
I guess you meant immigrants
2008\05\02@083928
by
Jake Anderson
|
Apptech wrote:
{Quote hidden}>>> If this is true probably I will never visit US, that
>>> would have been far
>>> too much.
>>>
>>> www.theregister.co.uk/2008/05/01/electronic_searches_at_us_borders/
>>>
>> I would think that the easiest way to work around this is
>> to just encrypt and
>> upload the information you need, and download it after you
>> cross the border.
>> You can then just bring along a laptop, which has nothing
>> personal on it.
>>
>
> This seems to assume that downloaded data is safe from
> intrusion. As it also crossed the border on the way in, and
> as it is trivially easy to copy it at the rate that it comes
> in at (unlike the data on a laptop*) then why should it be
> considered secure?
>
>
>
> Russell
>
It's pretty easy to encrypt stuff harder than that which is used for
internet banking. Assuming that it was possible to break transport level
encryption then the mafia or other similar organisations would have
already done so and any flaws revealed. The fact that they persist in
targeting end users which is a slow and difficult process rather than
going for man in the middle attacks implies that it is likely impossible.
If you are physically attached to your data then you can be compelled to
give out keys to it.
As to intercepting the data as it travels, china is trying, they have a
fraction of the connected population and a free hand to do it, and they
are failing. Encryption is illegal there as far as I'm aware, a friend
of mine has a client with a branch office there. The great firewall was
delaying their emails to the tune of 6 hours or so, and he was told its
illegal for him to use a vpn to pass the data out. How much of that
would be enforced is a separate issue.
2008\05\02@084600
by
David VanHorn
Large files full of random data, encrypted with large keys.
:)
2008\05\02@091019
by
Gerhard Fiedler
Jinx wrote:
>> www.theregister.co.uk/2008/05/01/electronic_searches_at_us_borders/
>
> People will start going off politicians if they keep passing stuff like
> that
I'm not so sure. Some get elected for doing things worse than that.
Besides, most of the US citizens rarely if ever leave the country, so they
are not really that concerned about something like this -- if they even
know.
Gerhard
2008\05\02@091807
by
sergio masci
On Fri, 2 May 2008, David VanHorn wrote:
> Large files full of random data, encrypted with large keys.
> :)
> --
The worst of all possible situations. What's going to happen WHEN the CIA
come knocking on your door in your own country (NOT the US) and demands
the key. How are you going to prove that you have given them the key and
the data is supposed to be random junk?
Regards
Sergio
2008\05\02@092002
by
Apptech
> Yes, but was that entering or leaving the country? I am
> thinking you only
> need to hide it when entering, and AFAIK the shoe
> inspection is only on
> leaving a country.
More likely on exit.
They tend to randomly pick people in entry.
In China they were XRaying all bags (but not shoes as far as
I know :-) ) before getting onto the train in Qingdao - 400
to 500 km away from Beijing and Shanghai.
R
2008\05\02@092425
by
Apptech
>> Entering, no, you're already there.
>> Leaving ... . Now that may be different :-)
> I think they afraid more of illegal emigrants, so if you
> just say "I came
> here for work and better life and will bring my family
> here too as soon as
> possible" you will be in your home country before you
> could finish this
> sentence :-)
Or Cuba ? :-(.
2008\05\02@093141
by
David VanHorn
> The worst of all possible situations. What's going to happen WHEN the CIA
> come knocking on your door in your own country (NOT the US) and demands
> the key. How are you going to prove that you have given them the key and
> the data is supposed to be random junk?
How can you prove that you didn't hide data in those pictures with
steganography?
I tell ya, this police state crap is making me think emigration....
2008\05\02@093446
by
Vic Fraenckel
Since the 'Government' is responsible, by law, to protect its citizens, what
would you have them do? Can you deny that harmful things can be brought into
the country in the form of encrypted information? If you data is so
important to you that you need to have it with you while traveling, why not
encrypt it and store it as an attachment in some email and then download it
when you get to your destination. Just don't carry it with you through
customs. It is hubris to think anyone gives a damn about your data anyway,
especially some customs or TSA drone at an airport.
Vic
--
______________________________________________________________
Victor Fraenckel
KC2GUI
windswaytoo ATSIGN gmail DOT com
2008\05\02@093602
by
Tamas Rudnai
> How are you going to prove that you have given them the key and
> the data is supposed to be random junk?
Well, you can generate a "key" that if you xor the encrypted data with, it
reveals the War And Piece so they will be satisfied :-)
On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 4:35 PM, sergio masci <EraseMEsmplxspam_OUT
TakeThisOuTallotrope.net> wrote:
{Quote hidden}>
>
> On Fri, 2 May 2008, David VanHorn wrote:
>
> > Large files full of random data, encrypted with large keys.
> > :)
> > --
>
> The worst of all possible situations. What's going to happen WHEN the CIA
> come knocking on your door in your own country (NOT the US) and demands
> the key. How are you going to prove that you have given them the key and
> the data is supposed to be random junk?
>
> Regards
> Sergio
> -
2008\05\02@094444
by
Shawn Tan
On Friday 02 May 2008 16:35:17 sergio masci wrote:
> The worst of all possible situations. What's going to happen WHEN the CIA
> come knocking on your door in your own country (NOT the US) and demands
> the key. How are you going to prove that you have given them the key and
> the data is supposed to be random junk?
Can't you just set your guard dogs at them for trespassing and leave it at
that?
But it's funny how governments are so focused on catching data coming in, that
they are happy losing data going out. I think that it's just as dangerous, if
not more so, to lose sensitive information (laptops and CDs).
--
with metta,
Shawn Tan
Aeste Works (M) Sdn Bhd - Engineering Elegance
http://www.aeste.net
2008\05\02@095922
by
Apptech
> How can you prove that you didn't hide data in those
> pictures with
> steganography?
Sssssh!!!
Don't tell people!
I was keeping quiet about that.
FWIW
http://others.servebeer.com/misc/1stfoot.doc
Short SciFi.
Some say it's good. Some.
You'll find some steganography in there.
Russell
2008\05\02@100003
by
Alan B. Pearce
>In China they were XRaying all bags (but not shoes as far as
>I know :-) ) before getting onto the train in Qingdao - 400
>to 500 km away from Beijing and Shanghai.
When we went on the train from China to Russia they weighed all the bags,
and we had to pay excess baggage. This got introduced as there were so many
traders taking stuff from china to Russia that they had to control how much
they took by making them pay excess baggage charges. We couldn't avoid it
despite obviously being tourists.
There was a train stop after we got on, before the border, and this seemed
to be the stop the traders got on. You have never seen so much stuff tossed
into a coach in a 10 minute stop. The corridor was absolutely solid with
goods, which were then stacked in the traders compartment once the train got
underway. Once that was done, the lady responsible for the coach made them
sweep the corridor out before she laid out the carpet strip along the
corridor. She wasn't having any truck with having to clean up after the
traders !!!
Quite a lesson the ways of international relations ... ;))
2008\05\02@100212
by
David VanHorn
|
On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 9:34 AM, Vic Fraenckel <windswaytoo
spam_OUTgmail.com> wrote:
> Since the 'Government' is responsible, by law, to protect its citizens, what
> would you have them do? Can you deny that harmful things can be brought into
> the country in the form of encrypted information? If you data is so
> important to you that you need to have it with you while traveling, why not
> encrypt it and store it as an attachment in some email and then download it
> when you get to your destination. Just don't carry it with you through
> customs. It is hubris to think anyone gives a damn about your data anyway,
> especially some customs or TSA drone at an airport.
By that logic, I have no reason to prevent random searches of my home
or my person either.. Sorry, that's unacceptable.
The government is also charged with defending our rights, which does
conflict with other goals they have, but our rights are supposed to be
inviolate.
FWIW I oppose random traffic stops for the same reason. I applaud what
they are trying to do, but I despise the methods they are using.
2008\05\02@103045
by
sergio masci
On Fri, 2 May 2008, Shawn Tan wrote:
{Quote hidden}> On Friday 02 May 2008 16:35:17 sergio masci wrote:
> > The worst of all possible situations. What's going to happen WHEN the CIA
> > come knocking on your door in your own country (NOT the US) and demands
> > the key. How are you going to prove that you have given them the key and
> > the data is supposed to be random junk?
>
> Can't you just set your guard dogs at them for trespassing and leave it at
> that?
>
> But it's funny how governments are so focused on catching data coming in, that
> they are happy losing data going out. I think that it's just as dangerous, if
> not more so, to lose sensitive information (laptops and CDs).
Why is it so funny? The wrong piece of information could expose a corrupt
government. Surely that's as dangerous to them as a bomb would be to us.
Regards
Sergio
2008\05\02@103750
by
sergio masci
On Sat, 3 May 2008, Apptech wrote:
> > How can you prove that you didn't hide data in those
> > pictures with
> > steganography?
>
> Sssssh!!!
> Don't tell people!
> I was keeping quiet about that.
>
Go on joke!
In the UK we have the RIP act. If an individual is asked for a password or
encryption key he/she can be imprissioned for 2 years if he/she does not
produce it. Furthermore that individual can be imprissioned for a further
3 years if he/she informs anyone that they were asked for the password or
encryption key.
So some a*hole sends you an email containing something "bad". You have no
knowledge of the contents or the encryption key but you can be put away
for it.
Still laughing?
Regards
Sergio
2008\05\02@105015
by
Alan B. Pearce
>> The worst of all possible situations. What's going to happen WHEN the CIA
>> come knocking on your door in your own country (NOT the US) and demands
>> the key. How are you going to prove that you have given them the key and
>> the data is supposed to be random junk?
>
>Can't you just set your guard dogs at them for trespassing and leave it at
>that?
Not the way the American legal system has come knocking on UK borders to get
people extradited for supposed white collar crime - e.g. the 3 British
bankers who have been extradited for dealing with the local Enron
representatives ...
2008\05\02@110919
by
Bob Axtell
sergio masci wrote:
> On Fri, 2 May 2008, David VanHorn wrote:
>
>
>> Large files full of random data, encrypted with large keys.
>> :)
>> --
>>
>
> The worst of all possible situations. What's going to happen WHEN the CIA
> come knocking on your door in your own country (NOT the US) and demands
> the key. How are you going to prove that you have given them the key and
> the data is supposed to be random junk?
>
> Regards
> Sergio
>
When I was younger and making real money, I owned two safes. The first
one was showy and behind
a large picture, and held $200 in cash, that's all. The second was in my
basement floor under a false floor.
It held the real money, passports, precious documents.
If the bad guys (cops _or_ robbers) came, they got the stuff inside
the picture safe, nothing else. We never
admitted to anyone that there were two safes.
You can do that with encrypted files, too. Flash drives with
TRUECRYPT.EXE and encrypted hidden containers will
do the same function. Have one container unhidden, have several more
hidden. Put junk in the unhidden container
and several hidden ones, then put the good stuff in a final encyrpted,
hidden container.
The problem with governments are that they are both bad and good at the
same time. Any government strong enough
to give you anything you want, is strong enough to take everything
you've got.
As an old friend once told me, "government is like fire. Confined in a
stove, it can keep you warm and cook your food.
If it gets loose from the stove, it will just as easily burn your house
down. The stove is the Constitution; if that is ever
removed, things will become very bad in the USA".
2008\05\02@111500
by
Herbert Graf
On Fri, 2008-05-02 at 09:31 +0100, Tamas Rudnai wrote:
> If this is true probably I will never visit US, that would have been far too
> much.
>
> www.theregister.co.uk/2008/05/01/electronic_searches_at_us_borders/
>
> ...So please tell me that it is fake :-)
> Tamas
Unfortunately I believe it's at least mostly true, most of this was
actually reported about a week ago.
I don't think people realize that when you try to cross the US border
most of the "rights" people think they have disappear. The fact that
this story surprises people is further evidence of that.
TTYL
2008\05\02@111819
by
Herbert Graf
On Fri, 2008-05-02 at 11:02 +0100, Alan B. Pearce wrote:
> A better way would be to put the data on a flash card, USB or CF (I saw an
> announcement for a 32GB CF card recently) and stuff that in your shoe while
> going through customs. A CF card would fit nicely in a convenient slot in
> the heel while going through customs.
This idea will most likely get you sent to the "strip search" room.
Remember, in almost all US airports shoes must be removed and put
through the XRay machine. What do you think their reaction will be if
they see something hidden, nevermind a CF card or flash key in your
shoe?
TTYL
2008\05\02@113202
by
Dario Greggio
Bob Axtell wrote:
> When I was younger and making real money, I owned two safes. The first
> one was showy and behind
> a large picture, and held $200 in cash, that's all. The second was in my
> basement floor under a false floor.
> It held the real money, passports, precious documents.
LOL :)
so this is not just a friend of mine's thought.
He was on holiday in a roulotte. He hid a wallet below the pillow or so,
with just a bit of money. And then put the real money somewhere else...
--
Ciao, Dario
2008\05\02@113633
by
Dario Greggio
Herbert Graf wrote:
> through the XRay machine. What do you think their reaction will be if
> they see something hidden, nevermind a CF card or flash key in your
> shoe?
Hmm, I assumed he meant "down the heel, in the socks"
2008\05\02@113645
by
Vasile Surducan
If you still live in England, you have absolutely no reason to carry a
laptop with you in US.
Just store your interesting information on a server with FTP access,
buy a laptop in US (now is cheaper than anywhere in the world because
of dollar fall, I've seen amazing laptops at $700) and load it with
the software you have stored.
BTW, a plastic USB storing device is not very visible on Xray.
They put to take out your shoes only when go out from US, not when you
go in, I guess is just for amusement... :)
The guys from Xray are making two dollar bets on how fast are peoples...
On 5/2/08, Tamas Rudnai <@spam@tamas.rudnaiKILLspam
gmail.com> wrote:
{Quote hidden}
> -
2008\05\02@121836
by
Tamas Rudnai
> He was on holiday in a roulotte. He hid a wallet below the pillow or so,
> with just a bit of money. And then put the real money somewhere else...
Sounds like a common solution to me. So tell me the end of the story, your
friend went back and the wallet with the small money was still there, but
the other one has gone? :-)
On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 4:31 PM, Dario Greggio <KILLspamadpm.toKILLspam
inwind.it> wrote:
{Quote hidden}> Bob Axtell wrote:
>
> > When I was younger and making real money, I owned two safes. The first
> > one was showy and behind
> > a large picture, and held $200 in cash, that's all. The second was in my
> > basement floor under a false floor.
> > It held the real money, passports, precious documents.
>
>
> LOL :)
> so this is not just a friend of mine's thought.
>
> He was on holiday in a roulotte. He hid a wallet below the pillow or so,
> with just a bit of money. And then put the real money somewhere else...
>
> --
> Ciao, Dario
> -
2008\05\02@121936
by
Alan B. Pearce
>> through the XRay machine. What do you think their reaction will be if
>> they see something hidden, nevermind a CF card or flash key in your
>> shoe?
>
>Hmm, I assumed he meant "down the heel, in the socks"
Well, that was my initial thought, on the basis that one could probably slip
a CF card down your sock without it being too noticeable when you come into
the country. But then such a card could just as easily be tucked into a
shirt pocket, or put in with the camera (make sure there are a few photos on
it, its a spare card for the camera ...), or any of a number of other
places.
Hmm, now The Gadget Show has been playing with some rugged USB drives
recently ... ;))))
2008\05\02@122954
by
Dario Greggio
Tamas Rudnai wrote:
>>He was on holiday in a roulotte. He hid a wallet below the pillow or so,
>>with just a bit of money. And then put the real money somewhere else...
>
> Sounds like a common solution to me. So tell me the end of the story, your
> friend went back and the wallet with the small money was still there, but
> the other one has gone? :-)
I see :)
Oh, no, nothing bad happened - though it was "bad" part of Italy (don't
want to tell the exact place, in case anyone on hte list may feel
offended :)))
BTW I never did that..
--
Ciao, Dario
2008\05\02@123432
by
Tamas Rudnai
Just program the data to a 18F USB device that you make a "product" from
like a USB serial converter... when you arrived download the firmware... You
can scramble the data so even if they read it out hard to prove if that is a
junk that left there after the development phase or is an encrypted data.
There are millions of way to slip data into and from a country, bad guys
will use them even more advanced methods, and you suffer the rest. Maybe
they could get caught some pedofils or illegal Microsoft users but is that
really worth the effort?
Tamas
On Fri, May 2, 2008 at 5:19 PM, Alan B. Pearce <RemoveMEA.B.PearceTakeThisOuT
rl.ac.uk> wrote:
{Quote hidden}> >> through the XRay machine. What do you think their reaction will be if
> >> they see something hidden, nevermind a CF card or flash key in your
> >> shoe?
> >
> >Hmm, I assumed he meant "down the heel, in the socks"
>
> Well, that was my initial thought, on the basis that one could probably
> slip
> a CF card down your sock without it being too noticeable when you come
> into
> the country. But then such a card could just as easily be tucked into a
> shirt pocket, or put in with the camera (make sure there are a few photos
> on
> it, its a spare card for the camera ...), or any of a number of other
> places.
>
> Hmm, now The Gadget Show has been playing with some rugged USB drives
> recently ... ;))))
>
> -
2008\05\02@130005
by
Shawn Tan
On Friday 02 May 2008 17:34:30 Tamas Rudnai wrote:
> Just program the data to a 18F USB device that you make a "product" from
> like a USB serial converter... when you arrived download the firmware... You
> can scramble the data so even if they read it out hard to prove if that is a
In the same vein, you could print out the encrypted data in armored text (or
some sort of 2D bar code). Then, just cross the border with sheafs of paper
in your luggage. You can even bind it together into some sort of book and
just waltz across the border while pretending to read it.
--
with metta,
Shawn Tan
Aeste Works (M) Sdn Bhd - Engineering Elegance
http://www.aeste.net
2008\05\02@182541
by
Gerhard Fiedler
|
Vic Fraenckel wrote:
> Since the 'Government' is responsible, by law, to protect its citizens,
> what would you have them do? Can you deny that harmful things can be
> brought into the country in the form of encrypted information?
If you followed the discussion, you probably got a reasonable impression
how encrypted information can be brought into the country in a number of
ways, bypassing the random copying of private data from private notebooks.
> If you data is so important to you that you need to have it with you
> while traveling, why not encrypt it and store it as an attachment in
> some email and then download it when you get to your destination.
This sounds as if you would contradict yourself here. If it's that easy to
circumvent this random intrusion, what makes you think this is a useful
measure? Don't you think that the "bad guys" are just as smart?
Besides, this sounds as if you never were on the road (or better, "in the
air") visiting clients, for example. There's all kinds of stuff that I have
in my computer, just in case. Some is sensitive, some is private... the
thing is, I use my computer for more than hobby PIC projects and
downloading pictures :) So, according to this advice, I'd have to carefully
search my system, separate all the private and sensitive data, remove it
(and making sure I know from where I removed it, as some programs are a bit
picky about where to find their data files), make sure I don't run any of
those picky programs while their data is not where they expect it, upload
it (maybe GB) to some server, then at the target location get it all down
again, distribute it to the correct places, yada yada yada. Lots of work --
for what?
> Just don't carry it with you through customs. It is hubris to think
> anyone gives a damn about your data anyway, especially some customs or
> TSA drone at an airport.
So why would they want to copy it?
Gerhard
2008\05\02@212939
by
Apptech
|
> If you still live in England, you have absolutely no
> reason to carry a
> laptop with you in US.
> Just store your interesting information on a server with
> FTP access,
> buy a laptop in US (now is cheaper than anywhere in the
> world because
> of dollar fall, I've seen amazing laptops at $700) and
> load it with
> the software you have stored.
> BTW, a plastic USB storing device is not very visible on
> Xray.
For customs I carry my camera Flash cards in a small bag
that fits in my closed hand. If they spot it, which varies,
I open it and show them the cards. I point out that they are
my canmera cards and that I'd rather not have them XRayed.
Almost always they accept this, glance at them and let me
through. Occasionally they insist on XRaying them. I do not
think that XRays at the level they use are liable to be a
problem but it's a possibility which I'd rather avoid. Apart
from photos since last PC session I always have duplicates
of my photo files on laptop HDD and maybe CD/DVD/external
HDD as well. I do get the occasional corrupt photo file for
reasons unknown - but this is true locally as well as on
international trips.
> They put to take out your shoes only when go out from US,
> not when you
> go in, I guess is just for amusement... :)
Gaggle
"Richard Reid" shoe
or
"Abdul Raheem" shoe
Russell
2008\05\03@103712
by
David VanHorn
> > They put to take out your shoes only when go out from US,
> > not when you
> > go in, I guess is just for amusement... :)
>
> Gaggle
>
> "Richard Reid" shoe
> or
> "Abdul Raheem" shoe
I'm thankful he didn't try it with explosive underwear....
2008\05\03@175715
by
Robert Ammerman
No, no sir... that isn't an encrypted file. Its just a source of random
numbers for picking the lotto.
--- Bob Ammerman
RAm Systems
2008\05\05@101645
by
Peter
|
sergio masci <smplx <at> allotrope.net> writes:
> Why is it so funny? The wrong piece of information could expose a corrupt
> government. Surely that's as dangerous to them as a bomb would be to us.
They are not afraid because all governments are corrupt. That's why it's 'legal'
to extradite citizens to a country they have nothing to do with because they
wrote some software or other and that's why data about foreign bank accounts
obtained illegally by breaking the law can be used 'in support' of a legal
investigation that can put people in jail and worse. In general, the act of a
citizen of a country that condones or helps another country to obtain and export
data, goods or people from his own country against prevailing laws is called
treason. It's the voter's choice how much of this treason they are willing to
support, at least in democratic countries. Oh, and, by the way, treason commited
by state officials, such as members of the security forces, police, government
employees and army are much, much worse than treason commited by private
individuals. Some places they still hang those who do such things.
Peter
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