Interpol Chief's Identity Spoofed On Facebook 64
An anonymous reader writes "Ronald Noble, Interpol's Secretary General, has revealed that cybercriminals have opened two fake Facebook accounts using his name and used them to gather sensitive information. 'One of the impersonators was using this profile to obtain information on fugitives targeted during our recent Operation Infra Red,' Noble said. 'This Operation was bringing investigators from 29 member countries at the Interpol General Secretariat to exchange information on international fugitives and lead to more than 130 arrests in 32 countries.'"
I don't get it (Score:5, Insightful)
How does spoofing his identity on Facebook help? Was someone dumb enough to send confidential information regarding a criminal investigation to one of these spoof users via Facebook? Please tell me that's not the case. But the article is short on details and I can't think of any other way such a spoof would cause any kind of leak.
Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Insightful)
My thoughts exactly.
If this scam actually netted them any info then whoever provided it needs to be hung out to dry. This is ridiculous in the extreme.
Hmmm (Score:3, Insightful)
That way, if someone creates a fake account in your name, if people see that there's more than one account which has your name, it will give them cause to suspect that one of th
Re:Hmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
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A digital signiture on it's own is only part of the puzzle for identifying an entity (wheter that entity is an individual or an organisation). You also need a way to determine that the key used to make that signiture really belongs to the entity in question.
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Someone isn't likely to dig me up without having a mutual friend on Facebook. If they see their friend friend me, and they know I'm not on facebook, or have never seen me there before, they're more likely to figure ou
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it's probably a good idea to create accounts in social media/networking sites even if you'll never use them just to "reserve" your identity
That's exactly what I've done in various places. The trouble is that there are so many slight variations that will fool all but the technically savvy and critical friends and contacts. And, you're still not safe, with all the news stories about hacked accounts and leaked password lists.
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you might not be the only one to want a particular user name and/or to have the same name as you do (and spelled the same way and/or variations). Also you're essentially trying to copyright your own name, without failing to realize that essentially there is no way to copyright your name. If I wanted to be KlaymenDK I'd just make KlaymenDK_ or Klaym3nDK or something like that. That's a very dickish move to do.
There is no way to "own" your identity. It sounds nice, but it doesn't work. It sure does make it e
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I agree completely -- online name registration cannot be guaranteed unless there was something similar to the domain-registration system, which would in turn obliterate anonymity.
I'm not sure how to read your "dickish move", though: are you saying it's dickish to "hog" your desired user name (akin to a domain shark), or to create lookalikes for spoofing (akin to a domain spoofs (which, BTW, can also be hogged, see http://gogle.com [gogle.com]?
Also, you remind me of an earlier discussion regarding online names. Actually
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also I have no idea why that was posted anonymous.
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Probably they were hoping to snag some would-be informants rather than Interpol staffers.
Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Insightful)
Was someone dumb enough to...
The answer to that question, however you end it, is most often "Yes".
Re:I don't get it (Score:5, Informative)
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(from TFA)
"Our world is increasingly connected and networked and therefore also increasingly vulnerable to disruptions caused by intrusions and cyber attacks," he said. "Cybercrime is emerging as a very concrete threat. Considering the anonymity of cyberspace, it may in fact be one of the most dangerous criminal threats ever."
I have nothing to hide, but apparently I have a lot to worry about.
If Interpol’s Secretary General actually worries about the vulnerability, then perhaps it's not such a brilliant idea to store a lot of personal information on a bunch of servers???
To me, this is the best argument for privacy at the moment: I am not so much worried that Interpol will turn evil. But I am worried that they cannot guarantee that all our personal data is safe on their servers.
Re:I don't get it (Score:4, Interesting)
I wouldn't be surprised. While at drill this weekend, I learned that one of our people got activated, and her CO told her in a Facebook message.
These types of things, as well as poor computer security practices in security agencies bother me.
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Sounds like someone didn't pay attention during their OPSEC briefing.
Context (Score:5, Interesting)
Also note that the actual statement says the impersonator was trying to gather sensative data, not quite the success as implied in the summary. The whole speech is available as a pdf here [interpol.int].
I don't know about the rest of you but one of the original reasons I grabbed a Facebook account was to prevent just that kind of thing happening - the same reason I've registered the most obvious forms of my name in as many social networking and emailing services as possible - if I hold the accounts then I possess some control over other people's ability to misrepresent themselves as me.
Re:Context (Score:5, Funny)
Oh and I forgot to add... This is especially important to control rumours about the goat incident.
cappp (sorry, I just logged out)
Re:Context (Score:5, Funny)
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Here's what computerworld said: Mind the 'was discovered only recently' seems to mean that they tried and succeeded for quite some time.
"...secretary general Noble revealed that criminals had set up two accounts impersonating him on the networking site during this summer's high-profile global dragnet, 'Operation Infra-Red'.
The fraud was discovered only recently by Interpol's Security Incident Response Team..."
And a new can of worms in open. (Score:2)
The way the DNS system work now, If you buy the domain cocacolacoacola.com , It will get from you from the corporation cocacola. You don't see something strange in that?, a city can name of the streets "coca cola", and the corporation will not own the street. But I digress...
If social networks continue to be important, and one is more important than all others, maybe judges will look at this the same way,and will see in very bad light if you create a account for Michael Jackson or Walt Disney. And I mean
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MMMmmmmmm Cloaca-Cola!
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Only an idiot .... (Score:3, Informative)
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(that is to say: the total intelligence in this world is constant, the population is raising. Yes, idiots still exists)
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Only if you refer to S/MIME as SSL and forget to mention PGP/MIME. Otherwise your SSL secured e-mail service suggestion is useless. Email is not secured same way as website traffic.
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Remember SSL only encrypts connections. Unless you trust every server in the email path and have them all configured to use SSL to talk to each other then it is not enough to provide security.
For real security you want an end to end encryption and authentication solution and even then you shouldn't access the system from untrusted devices.
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On that note, are you Tei from above?
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Dragon NaturallySpeaking is sufficiently accurate that I don't even bother to check what it has transcribed any more, allowing me to rant at leisure while reading something else.
When it makes a mistake, I always have Asperger's sufferers to point it out for the benefit of everyone else.
I can't tell if this is standard narcissistic behavior or just basic ass-hattery. --This being an example of a person who lives so soundly inside a personal bubble reality that it doesn't even think it is necessary to go to the trouble of communicating correctly in order to believe that its thoughts are understood by the rest of the world; after all, why put in the effort since the universe and all of its contents are already a simple extension of its own ego? Babies exist for a period where there is no d
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Worked up? No. Just observing you, pointing out patterns and asking questions.
You might ask yourself why you find that so upsetting.
And it wasn't a mis-placed apostrophe. It was garbled weirdness of a high order and the particular brand of justification you used, among several other things and general observation over time. Basically, the bubble version of your reality is vastly different from the real one which everybody else can see.
Mirror, mirror. . .
You're not even picking your own words, reflecting
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general observation over time
Oh, you're just one of those creepy stalkers who encounters someone on the Internet with more than one opinion he doesn't like and splatters with the crudest strokes an e-psychological diagnosis to summarily dismiss opposing ideas.
Even as the broken Turing readied himself to bite the apple, you'd still be telling him that you subjected him to treatment for illness, for his own good. What was his homosexuality, friend, if not a heinous misuse of idiom?
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Oh, you're just one of those creepy stalkers who encounters someone on the Internet with more than one opinion he doesn't like and splatters with the crudest strokes an e-psychological diagnosis to summarily dismiss opposing ideas.
Stalker? Ha ha! Don't flatter yourself. I simply pay attention to all the many thousands of things I read and tend to have a good memory. Trust me. You are not important. I know, it's probably asking the impossible for you to recognize that. Comparing yourself to Turing. . ? Oh dear! (And for the record, I have no problem with gays. I DO have problems with sociopaths and assholes, though.)
But if you want to clean up your act, you might try saying fewer thoughtless things and take the time to ensur
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Someone merely with a good memory remembers your address.
A stalker hangs outside your house then pounces you with, "I've been watching you!" as if your front porch were simply on his route home.
You are a stalker and a hypocrite, a stereotypical sort who preaches selflessness while providing his name twice in his missives, a proto-troll who begins with a hyper-politically correct invective asserting that good grammar is a sign of compassion and rounds off his rhetorical Happy Meal by suggesting that the othe
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A stalker hangs outside your house then pounces you with, "I've been watching you!" as if your front porch were simply on his route home.
Yeah, that's actually kind of paranoid. Maybe get some sunshine and fresh air?
You are a stalker and a hypocrite, a stereotypical sort who preaches selflessness while providing his name twice in his missives, a proto-troll who begins with a hyper-politically correct invective asserting that good grammar is a sign of compassion and rounds off his rhetorical Happy Meal by suggesting that the other house is a "retard".
Calling "Asperger's" is any different? And I'm the hypocrite? At least I was being fair.
But you know what? You win. I don't have the energy to spare. So please, believe whatever you will.
Thank you, my homeboy, and good day.
Righto. Bye.
-FL
False Flag? (Score:2)
Or maybe just that Assange guy doing his thing.
So what is the news here now? (Score:2)
So what is the news here?
1) That someone opens a fake account in the name of someone else (I presume that happens on a regular basis anyways), or
2) That some cluless idiots (sorry for the harsh words) do exchang SENSITIVE information on Facebook? And then they suddenly wonder how this information got into wrong hands?!
Come on (Score:4, Funny)
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A web-based chat system running on an Xbox360?
How it went down (Score:2)
Fake Noble: hey, i lost my phone lol, i'm soooooo dumb. do you happen to have the numbers for international fugatives 1 - 130? k thx x0x0
Current Status: (Score:2)
Miscreant (Score:2)
Why? (Score:1)
In this case, we're talking about the Chief of Interpol. Someone impersonated him to try to get information on a case. A case that they discussed. At a summit. IN PERSON
Criminal's baroque scheme foils Interpol again? (Score:2)
The inspector charged with apprehending them has declined to comment [imageshack.us].
Poor Zenigata (Score:2, Funny)