• Categories

  • Pages

  • Archives

A New Avenue to Prior Notice To The City?

A while ago, we first broke the news to  our readers that the NYPD was developing a technique for crime video and picture submission directly to the police. The delivery system is now fully operational. However, these report hotlines and avenues are not for criminal activity alone. Quality of life issues can also be reported (potholes, poor parks conditions….) At the end of the News article, however, we ask questions regarding how this information can then be used in the private sector.

DAILY NEWS CITY HALL BUREAU

Now you can send images and videos from your phone to cops regarding crimes, and to 311 regarding quality of life issues. Picture this: You e-mail a photo of a fleeing crook that you took with your cell phone to cops, who use it to bust the bad guy in a flash.

Now it can happen.

Callers to 911 can send photos and videos to NYPD’s Real Time Crime Center, where images are used to crack crimes or respond to emergencies, Mayor Bloomberg said Tuesday.

“This technology should scare every would-be criminal because the chance of getting caught in the act is now better than ever,” said Bloomberg.

All callers have to do is tell the dispatcher that they have a picture that could be useful in the emergency. The information is provided to cops, who contact the callers and give them an e-mail address to send the photo to.

Bloomberg, however, warned aspiring crime stoppers to exercise common sense when taking pictures. “As helpful as your photo or video image is, do not put yourself in harm’s way to obtain them,” he said. “Your safety is paramount.”

When callers say they have a crime photo, the 911 dispatcher enters a special code in the NYPD’s internal system that provides cops with the good Samaritan’s phone number.

“It’s another building block in our partnership with the public,” said Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly, noting that last month, the NYPD started accepting text-message tips.

But photos aren’t just for combatting crime.

New Yorkers can also send photos and videos – to 311 or http://www.nyc.gov – concerning quality-of-life issues like potholes, dirty parks or broken pay phones.

As with the protocol for 911, callers to 311 have to alert operators that they have a photo of the offense. Callers are directed to http://www.nyc.gov, where they can directly send up to three photos.

“All of these things add to the quality of life in this city,” said Bloomberg.

Bloomberg said he wasn’t worried about the system being flooded with photos, but urged the public not to “cry wolf”. I think the problem is reverse,” he said. “That people don’t call us enough.”

From our perspective, the quality of life reports (potholes, dangerous intersections, cracked sidewalks…) raises all sorts of issues re: notice to the City. And, will these reports, if founded, be channeled to private organizations such as Big Apple? Can copies of these reports be FOILed? Viz. the criminal reports: can we now identify high-crime areas that should have been more aggressively patrolled?  It will be interesting to see if this data can be accessed in preparation of litigation and if so, how it may be used in such capacity.

Our Operatives: Street smart; Net savvy.

As always, stay safe.

DNA-Collecting Pen, CSI Stick: Text Message Retriever & Other Cool Stuff To Know

Uzi Tactical Pen: Write, Collect DNA, Shatter Glass In An Emergency

The Uzi Tactical Pen, is a  unique writing instrument that can double up as a potentially life saving tool should the situation for it. The DNA Catcher which is located on the crown of the pen is very sharp, and hence can be used to deliver a very nasty jab to an attacker that causes not only extreme pain (and an opportunity to bolt away), while giving you a sample of their DNA to use when you go to the police. If you aren’t anticipating any attacks, the crown also functions as a glass breaker just in case you’re stuck in your vehicle. Made out of high-grade aircraft aluminum, it can write upside down or under water.

Watch out for ATM Skimmers

skim1-2

The ATM Skimmer (above)  is a slot that is designed to fit over an ordinary ATM card reader of your typical ATM.

This particular one was found on a Citibank ATM in Woodland Hills, California. When a customer went to withdraw some cash, little did he or she know that his or her card was scanned by a thief. The Skimmer also had a tiny camera to record the user as he or she entered his or her PIN number.

Senseaware really knows how to track a package

4131661328_dc69d351da_o

You’ve overnighted an important document and need to know if it has definitely been received.  You can monitor FedEx online every 5 minutes (and their status updates tend to lag anywhere from a few hours to a day) or you can use Senseaware. 

FedEx has stepped up their tracking game with Senseaware, a drop-in sensor for packages that monitors everything.

This device is about the size of a BlackBerry, and it tracks everything like temperature, exact location, and whether or not it has been opened or exposed to light. It even has a built-in accelerometer so it will detect when it has been dropped.

CSI Stick takes the info out of your cell phone

Attach to any cell phone and the CSI Stick will be able to see any calls placed or text messages sent or received. The CSI Stick can also make a logical copy of this data for further investigation, if needed.

BNI Operatives: Street smart: tech savvy.

As always, stay safe.

What’s In Your Pocket? CNet’s Top Five SmartPhones, 2009

From our friends at CNet:   This year’s:
Top Five  Smartphones
Rank #1 #2 #3 #4 #5          
Excellent score   Excellent
Very good score   Very Good
Good score   Good
Fair score   Fair
Poor score   Poor
Apple iPhone 3GS 32GB Palm Pre Motorola Droid BlackBerry Bold 9000 BlackBerry Curve 8900
Apple iPhone 3GS 32GB Palm Pre Motorola Droid BlackBerry Bold 9000 BlackBerry Curve 8900  
                     
Lowest Price  $299.00  $149.99  $199.99  $479.98  $399.00
 
Your Checklist:          
 
Cost effective?                    
Compatible?                    
Ease of Use?                    
Secure?      
Most likely to buy    
 
Screen Size 3.5 in 3.2 in 3.7 in 2.8 in 2.4 in          
Battery Life up to 300 min Up to 300 min Up to 385 min Up to 250 min Up to 330 min          
Memory 32 GB 8 GB 256 MB 1.128GB 128 MB          
3G Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark            
Display Resolution 480 x 320 320 x 480 440 x 854 320 x 480 480 x 360          
GPS Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark          
Bluetooth Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark          
Digital Player Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark          
Internet Browser Yes Yes Check Mark Yes Yes          
Wi-Fi Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark          
Phone Style Touch Screen Slider Slider Candy bar Candy bar          
Digital Camera 3.0 MP 3.0 MP 5.0 MP 2.0 MP 3.2 MP          
Video Recorder Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark          
Standby Time Up to 280 h Up to 480 h Up to 270 h Up to 222 h Up to 360 h          
3 way Calling Yes Yes Check Mark Yes Yes          
Call Hold Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark  Check Mark          
Call Timer Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark  Check Mark          
Call Waiting Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark  Check Mark          
Caller ID Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark  Check Mark          
Depth 0.4 in 0.6 in 0.6 in 0.6 in  0.5 in.          
Email Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark  Check Mark          
Height 4.5 in 3.9 in 4.6 in 4.4 in  4.6 in          
Operating System OS X Palm WebOS Android 2.0 BlackBerryHandheld Software BlackberryHandheld softare          
Polyphonic Ringer Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes          
Vibrating Alert Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark Check Mark          
Warranty 1 year 1 year 1 Year 1 year 1 year          
Weight 4.8 oz 4.7 oz 6.0 oz 4.8 oz 3.9 oz          
Width 2.4 in 2.3 in 2.4 in 2.6 in 2.4 in          
 
                     
Lowest Price  $299.00  $149.99  $199.99  $479.98  $399.00          
BNI Operatives: Street smart; Tech savvy.
As always, stay safe.

History’s Top 10 Real-Life Spy Gadgets: From M15 to Germany to Moscow and The US

We seem to be in a Top Ten list mode lately.

From TIME Online:

Top 10 real-life spy gadgets

With the news that MI5 is looking for a Chief Scientific Adviser, spy novelist Jeremy Duns reveals his ten favourite real espionage inventions:

1. Poison-tipped umbrella

Probably the most infamous real-life spy gadget is the umbrella used by the Bulgarian secret services – with KGB help – to kill dissident writer and broadcaster Georgi Markov. KGB technicians converted the tip of an ordinary umbrella into a silenced gun that could fire a pellet containing a lethal dose of ricin. On September 7 1978, Markov felt himself being jabbed in the thigh as he walked across Waterloo Bridge. A man behind him apologised and stepped into a taxi. Markov died four days later. No arrests have ever been made.

Times Archive: Tiny platinum ball is link in attacks on Bulgarian defectors

2. Dart gun

BACKGROUND
  • M15 advertise for real-life Q… to work part-time
  • KGB’s ‘Agent Scott’ revealed as Arthur Wynn
  • Spycraft: Inside the CIA’s Top Secret Spy Lab by Robert Wallace and H Keith Melton
  • Heath ordered MI5 to watch school rebels

It wasn’t just Soviet bloc spies who used such techniques, though. In a 1975 US Senate hearing on intelligence, CIA director William Colby handed the committee’s chairman a gun developed by his researchers.

Equipped with a telescopic sight, it could accurately fire a tiny dart – tipped with shellfish toxin or cobra venom – up to 250 feet. Colby claimed that, as far as he knew, this and other weapons had never been used, but he couldn’t entirely rule out the possibility.

3. Compass buttons

During the war, the Special Operations Executive – ‘Churchill’s secret army’ – created a wealth of Q-like devices. One ingenious invention was magnetized trouser buttons, which were to be used for agent who became lost – if they were taken prisoner, for example. By cutting off the buttons and balancing them on each other, they turned into compasses.

Times Archive: Cloak and Swordsmen

4. Exploding briefcase

Another SOE invention was a briefcase designed to hold sensitive documents, but which would act as a booby trap for any enemy agent trying to open it the wrong way. If the right-hand lock was held down and simultaneously pushed to the right, the briefcase would click open safely; otherwise, the left-hand lock would ignite.

Churchill’s Wizards reviewed by Max Hastings

5. Exploding rats

If exploding briefcases weren’t enough, the SOE boffins created something even more outlandish to battle the Nazis – exploding rats. Developed in 1941, the devices used the skins of real rats, with fuses concealed inside. The idea was to use them to blow up German boilers, but they were quickly discovered and so never put into production.

SOE in the Land of the Eagle reviewed by Max Hastings

6. Cigarette-case gun

In 1954, Soviet agent Nicolai Khokhlov was sent to Frankfurt to assassinate an anti-Communist leader. But Khokhlov had a last-minute attack of nerves and instead defected to the Americans. The Americans wasted no time in showing the world press the would-be assassin’s equipment, which included a gold cigarette case that concealed an electrically operated gun capable of firing cyanide-tipped bullets. In Ian Fleming’s novel From Russia With Love, fearsome assassin Red Grant tells his masters at SMERSH that they gave Khokhlov’s job to the wrong man: “I wouldn’t have gone over to the Yanks.”

Times Archive: Surrender To Americans Of Russian Terrorist

7. Hollowed-out lighter

In 1960, MI5 broke up a ring of KGB spies, at the centre of which were two Americans, Morris and Lona Cohen. The Cohens lived in a bungalow in Ruislip under cover as antiquarian booksellers Peter and Helen Kroger. But when MI5 searched the bungalow, they discovered an astonishing array of spy paraphernalia, including a cigarette lighter made by Ronson (the same brand as favoured by James Bond), inside which was hidden several one-time cipher pads. These were printed on cellulose nitrate and impregnated with zinc oxide so they would be easy to burn, thus destroying the evidence. But the Cohens weren’t quick enough, and they served eight years in prison.

Times Archive: Little Suburban House was Communication Centre for Spy Ring (more here )

8. Wallet document camera

Most intelligence agencies want to recruit people with access to top-secret material, but once recruited they still have to photograph the documents you’re after. If the security is too tight to remove documents from the premises, one way of doing this is to smuggle in a camera. During the Cold War, the KGB developed several disguised cameras, including one that looked just like a small leather pocket wallet – the edge of it was rolled against a document to expose the film. In the Sixties, signals intelligence technician Douglas Britten was blackmailed by the KGB into using one of these to photograph material at RAF Digby. But Britten was in turn photographed by MI5 at the Soviet Consulate in London, and when confronted pleaded guilty to treason.

Times Archive: Airman ‘A traitor and for all money’

9. Microphone in an olive

Also in the Sixties, American private detective Hal Lipset became famous when he demonstrated an unusual bugging device at a Senate subcommittee on surveillance: a miniature microphone hidden inside a (fake) olive. Perfect for placement inside a vodka Martini, the toothpick acted as an antenna. The range was short – about thirty feet – but Lipset’s show convinced the Senate to toughen the laws on recording people without their consent.

10. Rock bug

These days bugs can act as cameras, ‘reading’ digital documents and communicating in other ways. But however hi-tech espionage becomes, it seems intelligence agencies still can’t resist gadgetry. In 2006, Russian television claimed it had footage of British embassy officials transmitting information via a receiver disguised as a rock in a Moscow street. The British government denied the claim.

Literally the sky’s the limi with the the nantechology we can incorporate into spy gadgetry.  I’m watching the hors d’oeuvres.

BNI Operatives: Street mart, Web savvy.

As always, stay safe.

TIP OF THE WEEK FOR OUR SUBSCRIBED READERS: Your eyes are telling you the signature is real; your instinct is telling you it’s a forgery.  We’ll explain several methods used by real forgers to produce that perfect forgery.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 190 other followers

%d bloggers like this: