War Driving Version 2.0 182
asv108 writes: "There is an interesting article in the New York Times about the popularity of wireless cameras from X10 and how easy it is to easedrop on the feeds with relatively inexpensive equipment from up to a 1/4 mile away." I wonder if they're doing the things the X10 ads imply they might be doing.
X10's ad campaign (Score:4, Funny)
YOU CAN OPT OUT OF THE X10 ADS! (Score:1)
Re:YOU CAN OPT OUT OF THE X10 ADS! (Score:1)
Only works for 30 days... (Score:1)
Re:Only works for 30 days... (Score:2)
Re:Only works for 30 days... (Score:1)
Operating systems that don't use a defective time model by default can accept a Max-Age on a cookie of a full 32-bit range, and save that expiration date in a non-limiting format. This allows those browsers to expire a cookie up to 136 years after the moment it was set, and that's just following the spec. If the operating system doesn't have a broken time model, one should actually be able to modify that further, beyond what is possible with in the specifications laid out by RFC 2019.
Thus, in no case is 2099 the last year that you can use. It's either 2038, 2138 or infinite.
Re:Only works for 30 days... (Score:2)
Re:X10's ad campaign (Score:2)
hasta la mozilla (Score:1)
whos idea was it? (Score:1)
Sigh... (Score:3, Insightful)
After X10 spends all this money selling such an easy to use product, some dumb ass journalist stumbles accross the fact that
[GASP] These things are really easy to use!!!
And they work so well, they are really easy to use!!! by anyone!!!
OH MY GHOD!!! It's one channel garage door openers all over again!!
Re:Sigh... (Score:2)
(posted across my 802.11 modem...)
Implications. (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, because hot chicks in skimpy outfits love guys with nothing better to do than fuck around with obscure protocols.
That's one of the many reasons RMS gets all the ladies, right?
--saint
War driving my arse? (Score:1, Funny)
They're again pr0n driving wouldn't have the same 'ring' to it (oops excuse the pun)
Re:War driving my arse? (Score:4, Funny)
dumb law, bad law (Score:2)
wonderful.
and of course, no one is running to plug the legal hole.
Re:dumb law, bad law (Score:4, Insightful)
-John
Re:dumb law, bad law (Score:5, Informative)
All you need is the receiver to pick up a very nice picture and the range is incredible. Its too easy to fashion a crumpled up piece of aluminum foil around the antenna to concentrate the signal for dramatic range increases across the city.
Pass laws against receiving these? That's like banning the receive mode on CB radios. Its pretty much public airspace. Its an anarchy that people need to learn how to use if they want any privacy.
Re:dumb law, bad law (Score:3, Insightful)
Yep, that's some good common sense thinking, there. Which will last until some industry or the FCC gets worked up about it and makes it illegal - just like cell phone scanners. Unfortunately, the law doesn't have to square with common sense, and in some cases goes out of its way to avoid it :)
The correct solution is technical - just use hard encryption for your signal, and you couldn't care less who's snooping on it. But I wouldn't complain too much if the actual solution just makes receivers illegal; at least such a law would ensure a wide variety of exciting video experiences for those willing to put together their own receivers...
Re:dumb law, bad law (Score:1)
Let's not bring patents into this!
Re:dumb law, bad law (Score:2)
If someone really wants to draft a new law simply for the X10 cameras, go for it. But it seems a little wasteful to me.
Re:dumb law, bad law (Score:1)
Re:dumb law, bad law (Score:2)
Re:dumb law, bad law (Score:1, Redundant)
login id (Score:2, Informative)
p. slashdot12345
in case you need it
Re:login id (Score:1)
Time to mod back down - it doesn't work anymore.
Re:login id (Score:2)
Maybe they're not hurting enough yet?
--
Re:login id (Score:2)
1) NYTimes is reading Slashdot to find user names to disable.
2) NYTimes looks for user names that get used beyond certain limits and disables them.
Re:login id (Score:1)
Re:login id (Score:2)
The ads are the result! (Score:1)
no no no (Score:5, Funny)
You've got it all wrong; X10 is meant to protect and safeguard your family. All those half-dressed women in the ads are simply burglars, removing their bulky clothing so they can slither in through your window and steal your stuff.
My favorite quote (Score:5, Funny)
If only it was true...
Re:My favorite quote (Score:5, Funny)
If only it was true...
Hmmm, there's something about middle-aged, overweight Venezualan women that just doesn't do it for me....
Re:My favorite quote (Score:1)
It takes a real man to make those women happy.
Re:My favorite quote (Score:1)
Re:My favorite quote (Score:2)
Thank you! That got the image of Robin Williams in women's underwear, wearing the Mrs. Doubtfire wig and makeup right out of my head.
Re:My favorite quote (Score:2)
Come on, man! Live a little.
Besides, this is Slashdot, right? Probably better than many here can hope for...
Re:My favorite quote (Score:1)
Just wondering... (Score:1)
-Rusty
For a good time... (Score:5, Funny)
Press 2, then 5228. Enjoy!
I'm sure all
Re:For a good time... (Score:2)
Re:For a good time... (Score:3, Interesting)
Damn!
I just tried it, and the standard reply kept breaking up on me - I cannot beleive we've just slashdotted the auto-response for this telephone number! :)
-- Pete.
Re:For a good time... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:For a good time... (Score:2)
Re:For a good time... (Score:2)
It's times like this when I wish I had mod points, but don't.
Re:For a good time... (Score:1)
Thanks.
Re:For a good time... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:For a good time... (Score:1)
Re:For a good time... (Score:1)
Troll, Flamebait, Offtopic... (Score:2)
Re:For a good time... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:For a good time... (Score:1)
Or, to quote a response to my post to this thread, "it explains what masturbation is."
Re: (Score:1)
Hmm (Score:3, Funny)
Maybe I just need to buy more cameras...
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
steal credit card numbers? (Score:3, Funny)
In the nearby town of Madison, from the parking lot of a Staples store, workers could be observed behind the cash register.
I doubt it, but I wonder if the resolution was good enough to read the credit card numbers of the customers, when they put it on the counter.
Shit... (Score:3, Funny)
I should have thought over how they would get 10 hot females shipped via courier.
Re:Shit... (Score:2)
Enjoy.
Anything on the airwaves... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Anything on the airwaves... (Score:1)
For instance, hams can't even obscure their signal, much less encrypt it. I'm not sure of the laws on consumer devices, but's it's probably limited to specifically, explicitely defined encryption protocols and then only within the true consumer frequencies. (902-928Mhz) and 2.4Ghz, and also a slice around 40Mhz for old phones and intercoms.
Maybe someone with more definite knowledge can fill in my gaps.
Re:Anything on the airwaves... (Score:1)
I am a licensed ham and it's true, we can't use encryption on licensed ham frequencies. I think there's a clause that basically says we can, but everyone has to be able to decode it. Rot13 would prolly be okay, but then there's not much point in encyrpting something if everyone can read it anyways!
Either way, as long as you are allowed to transmit on a frequency, and you're not a ham and it's not a ham frequency.. then encryption is fine. There are a few exceptions though, data and encrypted signals on FRS radios are forbidden by the rules that created them. Then again, that hasn't stopped Garmin from introducing a combination gps/frs radio that you can use to tell other people with them where you're at. I don't know many people who would shell out $150 more or less per radio for that though.
Anyways, even where you can encrypt.. if your equipment doesn't already come equiped for that, then it's very hard to get a complicated system set up. There are a few hobbyist audio inverter systems, but then that's the same as rot13 and anyone with that can decrypt it. All new cordless phones come with encryption now, I think they all work on spread-spectrum principles as well.
(BTW, as an interesting aside related specifically to this article.. Icom released a communications receiver called the "Icom R3" it costs about $350 give or take. It has a little 2" color lcd screen on it, as well as being able to receive anything between 500khz (iirc) and 2.4ghz, except for the 800mhz cell band. It can receive any AM or FM tv transmission, from the broadcast tv to the wireless video senders and these camera's. This radio has been out for quite some months, though I couldn't tell you when it came out.)
Ugh..Just what the world needs.. (Score:4, Funny)
...More grainy porn featuring ugly nerds humping their bovine "webmistresses"....Yeesh. At $1.39 a gallon, i've got better things to do with a tank of gas than to drive around looking for things I don't really want to see.
Cheers,
"Digital" eavesdropping? (Score:2, Insightful)
Digital eavesdropping? The cameras send an analog signal just like a TV station does. Sheesh..
Re:"Digital" eavesdropping? (Score:3, Insightful)
And
Receiving Equipment (Score:5, Informative)
Or you could just order a reciever from X10 for $49. Maybe he was buying the 6 camera pack with eagle eye motion sensors and the auto vcr kit for the $250.
If you order from X10, what ever you do, make sure you give them a disposable e-mail address because they will send you so much spam, you will long for the days when all you received was viagra and porn e-mails.
-Bingo
Re:Receiving Equipment (Score:1, Informative)
Or you could get a good-quality 2.4GHz receiver for $80 or $90 (the X10 ones are crap) and a small yagi, which lets you pick the things up from at least 12 miles away.
Alternate Sources for X10 Equipment (Score:2)
Does anyone have any alternate sources for the equipment sold on X10.com? Several years ago, before they even started their pop-up campaign, I placed an order from these guys and called three weeks later to ask where my order was (and why they charged my credit card as soon as the order was placed weeks before). The sales rep I talked to was such a flaming asshole that I vowed never to do business with them again. So, does anyone else (reputable) sell this equipment?
chris
Read the story... (Score:5, Informative)
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=6
Orange
Re:Read the story... (Score:1)
Share and enjoy.
The obvious answer... (Score:4, Funny)
It looks like the obvious answer is to ban Radio Shack [radioshack.com] from selling soldering irons.
Re:The obvious answer... (Score:3, Funny)
It Happened To Me (Score:3, Interesting)
A start anyway (Score:5, Informative)
Here's How XCam2 Works [x10.com], and
X10 cameras and Video Senders use the following frequencies [x10.com]: 2.411GHz, 2.434GHz, 2.453GHz, 2.473GHz. So something like this (the Icom IC-R3) [texastowers.com] might work, as it can quickly scan the frequencies you're looking for and lock on one once a signal is found.
Also, from the XCam2 manual [x10.com]: "Refer to the setup and operating instructions that came with the 2.4 GHz Video Receiver, Model VR31A or
VR36A (sold separately) to set up the Receiver.". In other words, one only needs to buy said on of the suggested receivers [x10.com] for $50-$90 and scan those four channels manually.
Is it "Standard" 2.4ghz video? (Score:2)
Anyways, along with receiving equipment, I have a lot of high-gain Yagi directional antennas. I know the antennas would be good for this sort of thing, but is the x10 receiver just a standard 2.4ghz video transmitter? Should I be able to pick up x10 cameras with my receiver, or even worse, can our broadcasts be picked up by people sitting at home with a cheap x10 receiver?
Re:A start anyway (Score:2)
But yeah, there seems to be an overlap. Digging around a bit, I found these old slashdot posts: I can wipe you out [slashdot.org], licensed use trumps unlicensed use [slashdot.org], and we were there first [slashdot.org].
Wait! Let me get this straight... (Score:3, Funny)
Next thing you tell me, it will be easy to eavesdrop on cordless phones and walkie-talkies!!
Re:Wait! Let me get this straight... (Score:2)
You actually WANT government level security?!?!?!?
Blatant lie in NYT article (Score:3, Funny)
Anyone whos been to a Staples knows that there are NEVER any employees at the registers!
Re:Blatant lie in NYT article (Score:1)
A nice turn of phrase in the article (Score:4, Funny)
Precisely what people have been complaining about!
Re:A nice turn of phrase in the article (Score:1)
AUGH! (Score:2, Funny)
Ooooh, scary (Score:2, Interesting)
I have only one question for anyone who's actually trying this - why bother? The picture generated by an XCam is *crap,* and useless for anything but really grainy and poorly-saturated "surveillance" (and half the time it's useless for that, too!)
The CMOS module that the XCam uses is crap. The optics are plastic (or really crappy glass), and generate some really funky chromatic distortion, so I replaced the module with a Panasonic CCD module. Much better picture, but you still have to deal with the really nasty interference.
Re:Ooooh, scary (Score:5, Interesting)
I thought the system was worth the $250 bucks or so -- four cameras, robotic base, and other accessories. The images were acceptably clear, there's an interesting selection of cameras available, and the robotic base runs very smoothly and quietly. A decent web cam ususally runs around $50 or $60, so I thought it was worth the money.
Actually, the robotic base is what pushed us over the edge to finally buy a package. We were looking for a cheaper alternative to the $2500 and up price tags we were finding for such things. Even though the set up didn't work for our house, we think using them at work to "monitor" things like the computer rooms, printers, etc. would be handy. Printers and plotters in particular -- some folks in other buildings waste a lot of time walking across campus checking up on their prints.
WarDriving (Score:2)
Just what we need (Score:2, Funny)
As for the cameras themselves they operate in the 2.4GHz ISM band. That band has always been crowded because it doesn't require a license from the FCC to operate in. There has always been information available to anyone that took the effort to listen in. Only now that it has become popular with the public and you have a chance to see a naked nanny has anyone even noticed.
Let them eavesdrop on the X10 cameras. We all know that the real danger lies in the alien mind rays that my tinfoil hat stops.
I had a funny sig but a large corporation trademarked it and sued me into poverty.
Re:Just what we need (Score:1)
ROFL!!! hahaha you must be from Canada or England, i showed that to the office, we had a good laff, you crazy ppl and your crazy ideas.
if we were responsible.. who would we sue if we spilt hot coffie? would we sue ourselves? hahah i think not my good fellow.
Probably are (Score:2)
Spying on the neighbors? Probably.
And you thought you could spy without anyone watching...
ICOM R3 sucks at this purpose (Score:2, Informative)
The R3 is an all-band receiver with built-in video, and can receive broadcast TV, ATV, and wireless video, including 900Mhz and 2.4Ghz transmissions.
Unfortunately, the 2.4Ghz range only covers three of the four XCAM frequencies, and the receiver is deaf as a post above 2Ghz, even with a good antenna.
This can also be good (Score:1)
Can these be viewed with only software?? (Score:1)
Somebody's gotta hack up some sw to do this-- don't make me go out and ACTUALLY BUY HARDWARE!
The horror!
Get to work! I'll be checking freshmeat tomorrow!
Song: "We must destroy X10" (Score:1)
Tech TV (Score:1)
Re:I'm sorry, (Score:1, Informative)
War driving version 1 is about 802.11 (wifi) - people drive around big cities and overhear the traffic broadcast by banks, and so on.
this is v.2
hope that's clear
Re:I'm sorry, (Score:2, Informative)
WarDriving (v1) Driving through communities looking for open 802.11b AccessPoints.
WarDriving (v2) like v1, but looking for X10 cameras.
Re:I'm sorry, (Score:3, Informative)
The term comes from "War Dialing" which is pretty much no longer in practice. It was when phreakers would dial numbers in order until one picked up with a modem answer, kind of like brute force password cracking. Once a modem answered, most of the time people just tinkered with things to see what that particular phone number had in it.
For more information on war dailing, see the movie "War Games" (this is a CLASSIC 'hacker' movie).
I would assume that you do the same thing with X10 stuff, just hook it up to a laptop and drive around until you got a signal. Hence, war driving 2.0.
Re:Mind er spelling (Score:2)
Re:Mind er spelling (Score:1)
Re:page 1 (Score:1, Offtopic)
If someone were to alert the NY Times that people are moderating up copyright infringement, I wonder what would happen to Slashdot?