High-tech NYPD Unit Tracks Criminals through Facebook and Instagram Photos

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high 1 High tech NYPD Unit Tracks Criminals through Facebook and Instagram Photos The NYPD##Q##s Facial Recognition Unit used this photo to catch Alan Marrero, who was arrested in connection to a string of livery cab robberies. Courtesy of DNAinfo

Socializing online is landing criminals in custody.

Police are searching for suspects##Q## photos on Instagram and Facebook, then running them through the NYPD’s new Facial Recognition Unit to put a face to a name, DNAinfo New York has learned.

Detectives are now breaking cases across the city thanks to the futuristic technology that marries mug shots of known criminals with pictures gleaned from social media, surveillance cameras and anywhere else cops can find images.

High-tech NYPD Unit Tracks Criminals through Facebook and Instagram Photos | DFI News.

CCTV hack takes casino for $33 MILLION in poker losses

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A sophisticated scheme to use a casino##Q##s own security systems against it has netted scammers $33m in a high-stakes poker game after they were able to gain a crucial advantage by seeing the opposition##Q##s cards.

The team used a high-rolling accomplice from overseas who was known to spend large amounts while gambling at Australia##Q##s biggest casino, the Crown in Melbourne, according to the Herald Sun. He and his family checked into the Crown and were accommodated in one of its $30,000-a-night villas.

The player then joined a private high-stakes poker game in a private suite. At the same time, an unnamed person got access to the casino##Q##s CCTV systems in the poker room and fed the information he gleaned back to the player via a wireless link. Over the course of eight hands the team fleeced the opposition to the tune of $33m.

According to a 2010 Victorian Law Reform Commission report, the Crown has one of the most sophisticated security systems in the industry. Cameras and microphones are studded throughout the casino complex and the feeds are monitored 24/7 by both the casino and staff at the Victorian Commission for Gambling Regulation.

Access to the casino##Q##s private high-stakes poker rooms is restricted to the holders of special keycards, and this is augmented by physical security on the door. These rooms also have extra surveillance, with multiple pan, tilt, and zoom cameras watching the players.

crown casino CCTV hack takes casino for $33 MILLION in poker losses

Cameras both obvious and otherwise. Credit: David Caird

“Crown##Q##s surveillance department recently reported concerns over a sophisticated betting scam. A Crown investigation is under way and is ongoing,” said a Crown spokesman. The company is “in a good position to recover a significant portion of the amount involved in the scam.”

“Crown has been liaising with both the police and the Victorian Commission for Gambling and Liquor Regulation regarding these matters,” he said.

There may be very little the police can do. Once the scam was uncovered the high-roller was ejected from his suite in the middle of the night and banned from any future visits. He is believed to have returned to his overseas home. The VIP handler assigned to look after him on his visit has also been fired.

It##Q##s been an expensive few days for the casino, but the Crown##Q##s hardly in financial problems. The casino gets around 30,000 visitors a day and is a top spot for high-spending Chinese gamblers. Last year it reported profits of $181m.

CCTV hack takes casino for $33 MILLION in poker losses • The Register.

Men Who Spy on Women through Their Webcams

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men 0 Men Who Spy on Women through Their Webcams“See! That keeps popping up on my computer!” says a blond woman as she leans back on a couch, bottle-feeding a baby on her lap.

The woman is visible from thousands of miles away on a hacker##Q##s computer. The hacker has infected her machine with a remote administration tool (RAT) that gives him access to the woman##Q##s screen, to her webcam, to her files, to her microphone. He watches her and the baby through a small control window open on his Windows PC, then he decides to have a little fun. He enters a series of shock and pornographic websites and watches them appear on the woman##Q##s computer.

The woman is startled. “Did it scare you?” she asks someone off camera. A young man steps into the webcam frame. “Yes,” he says. Both stare at the computer in horrified fascination. A picture of old naked men appears in their Web browser, then vanishes as a McAfee security product blocks a “dangerous site.”

Men Who Spy on Women through Their Webcams | DFI News.

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Nearly Every NYC Crime Involves Cyber, Says Manhattan DA

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CybercrimeEvent ManhattanDA 590x394 Nearly Every NYC Crime Involves Cyber, Says Manhattan DA

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance speaks at a symposium called “Cybercrime in the World Today 2013″ at Pace University in Manhattan on Feb. 28, 2013. Vance said that cybercrime is the fastest growing crime trend in New York. (Joshua Philipp/The Epoch Times)

You may want to think twice the next time you need money from a curbside ATM, deciding instead to pay for a meal with a credit card.NEW YORK—Prosecutions for cybercrime and identity theft in Manhattan have increased by 50 percent in the last five years, and criminals have been rigging ATM machines and scanning credit cards when no one is looking.

“Cybercrime is the fastest growing crime trend in New York, and around the country,” said Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance, during a symposium called “Cybercrime in the World Today 2013″ at Pace University on Feb. 28. “The Manhattan police precincts now record cybercrime and identity theft as their most frequently reported complaints.”

According to Vance, cybercrime is not just a growing trend—it is a fundamental shift in the way modern crime works. Modern crime has already reached a point where nearly every crime in the city involves a cybercomponent.

“It is rare that a case does not involve some kind of cyber or computer element that we prosecute in our office—whether it is homicide, whether it’s a financial crime case, whether it’s a gang case where the gang members are posting on Facebook where they’re going to meet,” said Vance.

The trend is not just small-time crooks acting on their own, either. Many local criminals are working with international hackers—often hired guns in the former Soviet Bloc who can help them con people from the other side of the world. Vance said that organized crime rings are also getting in on the game and are realizing that cybercrime is less risky—yet more lucrative—than even the drug trade.

Fighting Cybercrime

The situation is not all doom and gloom, however, and New York City is helping to lead the way in a cross-department battle against cybercrime.

“So what do we do about this, how can we stop it, what kind of recovery plans do we need to have in place?” said Pace University President Stephen Friedman during a speech at the symposium, citing recent news of cybercrime and Chinese hackers targeting U.S. critical infrastructure.

“I believe that answering those questions requires the kinds of cooperation and partnership that we see here today,” Friedman said.

The city is getting help from the Secret Service, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), local businesses, and others. This system of cooperation was actually set up in 2001 when President George W. Bush signed the USA PATRIOT Act (H.R. 3162) into law. The act established the Electronic Crime Task Forces (ECTFs) under the Secret Service.

According to the Secret Service website, “The concept of the ECTF network is to bring together not only federal, state and local law enforcement, but also prosecutors, private industry and academia.”

CybercrimeEvent Standing 350x234 Nearly Every NYC Crime Involves Cyber, Says Manhattan DA

The panel of speakers at the Feb. 28, 2013, “Cybercrime in the World Today 2013″ symposium stand for a photo. (L-R) Assistant Special Agent in Charge of the U.S. Secret Service New York Field Office Paul Mahon, Deloitte & Touche LLP Principal Kelly Bissell, Association of Chartered Certified Accountants CEO Helen Brand, Pace University Computer Information Systems Program Chair Dr. Darren Hayes, Federal Reserve Bank of New York Officer Joe Leonard, Co-founder of the Verizon Business Investigative Response Unit Christopher Novak, and Executive District Attorney and Chief of the Manhattan DA Investigation Division David Szuchman. (Joshua Philipp/The Epoch Times)

The basic purpose of the ECTF, it states, “is the prevention, detection, mitigation and aggressive investigation of attacks on the nation’s financial and critical infrastructures.”

Paul Mahon, assistant special agent in charge of the U.S. Secret Service New York Field Office, who moderated the Pace event, said that his office is available to help local businesses with cybersecurity.

“For private industries, the Secret Service—through DHS and through the PATRIOT Act—has been mandated to reach out to you and help in any way that we can,” Mahon said. “There’s no cost associated with it.”

“If a small company does want to talk about their security system, we can give them free advice on how to best protect [their networks],” he added.

Digital Evidence

The Manhattan District Attorney’s office also received $4.2 million last year to build a cybercrime lab. It works as the city’s crime scene investigation lab for computers, where investigators can sift through data for evidence and search hacked hard drives for digital fingerprints.

Working with digital evidence is not easy, however. Computer forensics can be even more difficult to work with than physical evidence.

“You have to prove to the court that the data hasn’t been altered, that it does stand, and the accused was the one who should be standing trial,” Mahon said. “It’s a tumultuous process.”

At the end of the day, however, cybercrime is a new field for both criminals and law enforcement. Vance said that while more crime in New York is moving to the wires, through the cooperation between businesses, academia, and local and federal law enforcement, “we are in Manhattan having a lot of success.”

He said that when most of us think of “crime scenes,” television shows like “Law and Order” may come to mind—with yellow tape and the flashing lights of police cars. “But I think we all know today, the crime scene we think of is a different type of crime scene,” he said. “And now when I look back to the 1980s, when I was an assistant DA, we could not have had a more different picture of criminal trends in Manhattan than we do today,” Vance said. “Today, it’s identity theft and cybercrime. That’s what’s happening in every neighborhood around Manhattan, and I think, around the country.”

Nearly Every NYC Crime Involves Cyber, Says Manhattan DA | New York City | United States | Epoch Times.

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Hyderabad blasts: How investigators are feeling their way for answers

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The CCTV footage from the camera of a shop in Dilsukhnagar shows a man with a bicycle with a container parking it near Anand Tiffin shop. But just as the video forensics team gets excited about seeing the man who they think planted the bomb, they notice his bicycle has a bell. They scratch their head looking at the photograph of the bicycle at the blast site. That cycle did not have a bell. They look closely again, moving the footage frame by frame, wondering if it is the glare that is creating the illusion of a bell.

They have an issue with the bicycle seat’s rexine cover as well. They are not hundred per cent sure if the seat’s colour in the footage and the bicycle used in the blast is the same.A little while later, in another part of the footage, they see a man who resembles the person with the bicycle, walking away. The bicycle isn’t there but they cannot be certain it is the same man because the footage in this part has unfortunately turned black and white.This is just an example of the kind of painstaking effort that is going into analysing the mediocre quality CCTV footage procured from different shops around the blast sites. If only the Hyderabad and Cyberabad police had bothered to check the quality of these CCTVs by examining old footage when the first intelligence alerts came in November 2012 that terrorists had done a recce of five areas in Hyderabad, including Dilsukhnagar.

HyderabadBombBlastSite AP 22Feb4 Hyderabad blasts: How investigators are feeling their way for answers

Looking a needle in a blast site. AP

The CCTV footage in its present form is unlikely to lead the investigators anywhere. It has to be enhanced several times over, a laborious task that will take time. The police has collected several terabytes of footage and the video forensics team of the National Investigation Agency (NIA), which is yet to formally take charge of the case, will have to analyse every image, frame by frame.

If you think this is like looking for a needle in a haystack, there is more. The sleuths will also look at CCTV footage of ticket booking windows at bus stations and railway stations to check if any person spotted in Dilsukhnagar is also seen making an entry into Hyderabad some time before Thursday.

“It is a big challenge. There is a long way to go,” says a senior police officer, who has a track record in cracking terror cases.

Another officer added, “At the moment, there is no breakthrough. There are no specific leads.”Here is what the sleuths know so far. An old milk can like aluminium container was used to pack the bomb. In all, roughly 4 kg of ammonium nitrate was used, 2 kg in each location. They are also reasonably certain two different planters did the job of parking the bicycles and walking away. Timers were used in both bombs but they have not been found at the blast site. The theory is that the digital clock timers were put inside the container and they melted and were completely destroyed in the blast.The sleuths are trying to locate which dealer the old bicycles were bought from. Small hotels and lodges in the area have also been checked to see if anyone suspicious checked out around the time of the blast. Technical electronic evidence from cellphone towers is also being analysed to see if there is some pattern in phone calls made to people in the area before and after 7 pm on Thursday. Teams have also fanned out to check out certain individuals lodged in jails in Hyderabad and locations in Maharashtra.

The sleuths are trying to reconstruct the crime scene with the help of forensic evidence they have collected. Its quality is not up to the mark they desire thanks to the inability of the local cops to immediately cordon off the area and keep it sterile.

The regret also is that this was a terror attack that could have been prevented. Especially when apart from the Home ministry’s generic alerts, the state police’s own Counter Intelligence (CI) Cell had issued an alert to the city police after 2001 Parliament attack convict Afzal Guru’s execution. The CI cell’s alert was based on intercepts of phone conversations and text messages, that apparently indicated the possibility of an attack.

“Ever since the controversy over the Bhagyalaxmi temple that abuts the Charminar in November, the atmosphere has been surcharged in several pockets of Hyderabad. Many of us subconsciously felt something will take place to take advantage of the communal tension,” said a senior officer, who is now posted in Hyderabad police.

If the officer’s sixth sense had guided his colleagues to step up the vigil, Hyderabad might not have lost 16 precious lives.

Hyderabad blasts: How investigators are feeling their way for answers | Firstpost.

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Men Stripping for Webcam Get Extorted

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men Men Stripping for Webcam Get ExtortedThe age-old romantic story of “Boy meets girl” has surely become an awful lot more complicated now the internet has come along. At least, that’s what male computer users in Singapore are discovering.

We’ve warned readers before about some of the dangers involved in finding love online. Such as the true story of the Facebook blind date that turned into a supermarket robbery.

Now, people are being warned about another risk of finding love in the online world – webcam extortion.

But it’s not the familiar headline of perverted hackers blackmailing young women into stripping in front of the camera.

Men Stripping for Webcam Get Extorted | DFI News.