| ==Phrack Inc.== | |
| Volume Three, Issue 26, File 7 of 11 | |
| <><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><> | |
| <> <> | |
| <> PHONE BUGGING <> | |
| <> <> | |
| <> Telecom's Underground Industry <> | |
| <> <> | |
| <> By Split Decision <> | |
| <> <> | |
| <><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><> | |
| In today's landscape of insider trading, leveraged buyouts and merger mania, | |
| it is no great shock that a new underground industry has developed within | |
| telecom -- eavesdropping. | |
| Bugs are cheap (starting at $30) and can be installed in as little as 10 | |
| seconds. And you can bet your bottom $1 million that this expense pales in | |
| comparison to the rewards of finding out your takeover plans, marketing | |
| strategies, and product developments. | |
| According to Fritz Lang of Tactical Research Devices (Brewster, NY), there is a | |
| virtual epidemic of bugging going on in the American marketplace. Counter- | |
| surveillance agencies like TRD have sprung up all over. They search for | |
| eavesdropping equipment, then notify the client if they're being tapped. It's | |
| up to the client to respond to the intrusion. | |
| Each of TRD's employees is a retired CIA or FBI operative. Formerly, they | |
| planted bugs for Uncle Sam. Since it's illegal to plant bugs for anyone else, | |
| these men now engage in counter surveillance work, pinpointing eavesdropping | |
| devices, and sometimes the culprits who put them there, for TRD's client | |
| companies. | |
| Where Do They Put The Bugs? | |
| %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% | |
| Your TELEPHONE, of course, is a convenient place to install an eavesdropping | |
| device. But this doesn't mean that the illegal tapping will be limited to your | |
| phone conversations. | |
| Electronic phones have microphones which are always "live," even when the | |
| telephone is on-hook. Stick an amplifier and transmitting unit to the | |
| microphone, and you have constant surveillance of all conversations taking | |
| place in that room, whether or not the phone is off-hook at the time. | |
| A device rapidly gaining popularity among today's wire-tappers is a mouthpiece | |
| containing a tiny bug, which looks exactly like the one of your 2500 set. All | |
| it takes is one trip to the water cooler or the men's room for the insider to | |
| surreptitiously make the old switcheroo. | |
| LOUDSPEAKERS are another favorite location for wire-tappers, because they can | |
| pick up conversations when not in use. Paging systems, piped in music, and | |
| telephone systems all employ some variety of amplifier which the culprit can | |
| use to his advantage. | |
| LINE INTERCEPTORS allow eavesdroppers more extensive coverage of your | |
| activities, since they can monitor more than on-line communications from a | |
| single listening post. | |
| But really, the number of places you can find a bug is limited only by the | |
| tapper's imagination. Light switches, plugs, clocks, calculators, legs of | |
| wooden chairs, staplers, ashtrays, the underside of a toilet bowl -- all of | |
| these items have proved fertile territory for the little critters. | |
| Tools For Finding The Bugs | |
| %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% | |
| TRD's people use a patented Surveillance Search Receiver to locate the bugs. | |
| The Receiver uses a broad-band radio spectrum, from 25 kHz to 7 gHz. | |
| If there is an unaccounted-for radio frequency emission on the premises, the | |
| Receiver will tune it in on a small spectrum monitor. It then traces the | |
| emission to its inevitable source, the bug. | |
| For room bugs, they also use a Non-Linear Junction Detector, which can pinpoint | |
| all electronic circuit diodes or resistors in the architecture of the building. | |
| The Detector emits a high microwave signal into walls, furniture, et al., | |
| causing any circuit hidden within to oscillate. As soon as they oscillate, | |
| they become detectable. | |
| Mr. Lang clears up a misconception about the Russians bugging our embassy in | |
| Moscow. "They didn't riddle the building with actual bugs, instead, they | |
| buried millions of little resistors in the concrete." | |
| The embassy, therefore, became a hot bed for false alarms. Whenever the | |
| American counter-measure people came in with their detectors to look for a bug, | |
| they'd pick up oscillation readings from the countless resistors and | |
| capacitors buried in the walls. Finding any real bugs would be infinitely more | |
| difficult than finding the old needle in a haystack. | |
| For finding wire-taps along the phone lines, TRD uses a computerized electronic | |
| Telephone Analyzer. The unit runs 18 different tests on phone lines between | |
| the CPE block and the Central Office (CO). Resistance, voltage, and line | |
| balance are just a few of them. Once they locate a tapped line, they send a | |
| pulse down it with a time-domain reflectometer, which can pinpoint exactly | |
| where in the line the bug has been affixed. | |
| Bear in mind that wire-tapping is extremely difficult and time consuming. As | |
| much as 20 hours of conversations has to be monitored every single business | |
| day. Because of this, key executives' telephones are usually the only ones | |
| slated for a wire-tap. | |
| Catching The Culprit | |
| %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% | |
| Finding a wire-tap is easier than finding the spy who bugged your office. | |
| Direct hardwire taps can be traced to the remote location where the snoop | |
| stores his voltage-activated electronic tape recorder. After you've found the | |
| monitoring post, it's a matter of hanging around the premises until someone | |
| comes to collect the old tapes and put in fresh ones. | |
| As for room bugs, your best bet is to make the device inoperable, without | |
| removing it, and wait for the eavesdropping to come back to fix or replace it. | |
| Once Is Never Enough | |
| %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%% | |
| Some of TRD's clients have their offices checked monthly, some quarterly. | |
| After the initial sweep, you can have equipment installed on your phone lines | |
| which constantly monitors any funny stuff. | |
| As for TRD, they offer a money-back guarantee if they fail to detect an | |
| existing bug on your premises. Mr. Lang assures us that Fortune 500 company | |
| has been bugged to a greater or lesser extent. That's how out-of-hand the | |
| problem is getting. | |
| Toward the end of our conversation, Mr. Lang pauses. "So you're really going | |
| to print this, huh? You're really on the up and up?" Then he spills the | |
| beans. | |
| It turns out Mr. Fritz Lang is really Mr. Frank Jones (he says), a licensed | |
| private investigator with a broad reputation in the industry. He used the | |
| alias because he suspected I was from a rival counter-measure agency, or worse, | |
| a wire-tapper, trying to infiltrate his operations. | |
| Which quite possibly I am. You can't trust anybody in this spy business. | |
| _______________________________________________________________________________ | |