Re: An interesting thread...Hacking Bluetooth

2004-12-23 Thread Tyler Durden
Oh no, it gets really interesting. He claims to be an ex-German TLA-type 
(how many Ls do German TLAs normally have?), and had advanced knowledge of 
9/11. That's not super-implausible.

What's really interesting is that he claims the German TLAs have a new round 
of strong evidence showing that there's a nuke buried in Houston somewhere 
that's going to be set off on 12/27. He's tied in all sorts of shadowy 
agencies along with internal politcs causing the info not to be acted upon.

Even that would be worthy of ignoring, but he's actually told this story 
extremely well, naming fairly obscure (but real) names in the intelligence 
community and so on. The guy's posts have actually made some serious waves 
on a bunch of boards.

Me? I suspect he just pulled all this shit from David Emory's shows and then 
added some nice google tech searches. WiFi I know was cracked wide open a 
while back, and that wasn't exactly a secret (it's the reason for 802.11x). 
BUT, add knowledge of this to the conspiracy theories to the politics and 
you have a guy who has gone to great lengths to create an excellent hoax. 
Indeed, one can only imagine that the reason for something like this has to 
go way beyond mere hoaxing (eg, the guy's a neo-Nazi?)

I was hoping someone knew about this and had already hacked this hoax, 
because so far I haven't seen anything that conclusively debunks this guy.

-TD


From: Eugen Leitl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: An interesting thread...Hacking Bluetooth
Date: Wed, 22 Dec 2004 23:36:58 +0100
On Wed, Dec 22, 2004 at 02:13:52PM -0500, Tyler Durden wrote:
> "Here4s another myth: you cannot hack bluetooth from a distance of more
> than 40 metres. Not true. My technical partner Felix can crack it at 
over
> half a kilometre. Which is why he enjoys driving around so much in areas

The official record right now is 1.74 km:
http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/49907
http://trifinite.org/trifinite_stuff_bluebug.html#news
No doubt you can do much better with a large dish, and good alignment, as
well as a clear line of sight.
> where we know British, American, Israeli or Russian ops are living or
> working. The great thing about many German cities is that most 
affordable
> residences are within metres of the street anyway."
>
> Any comments?

Bluetooth attacks aren't exactly new. No idea what else that tinfoil-hatted
person is spouting.
--
Eugen* Leitl http://leitl.org";>leitl
__
ICBM: 48.07078, 11.61144http://www.leitl.org
8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A  7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE
http://moleculardevices.org http://nanomachines.net
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Re: An interesting thread...Hacking Bluetooth

2004-12-23 Thread Eric Murray
On Wed, Dec 22, 2004 at 09:48:01PM -0500, Tyler Durden wrote:
> Oh no, it gets really interesting. He claims to be an ex-German TLA-type 
> (how many Ls do German TLAs normally have?), and had advanced knowledge of 
> 9/11. That's not super-implausible.

[..]

> Me? I suspect he just pulled all this shit from David Emory's shows and then 
> added some nice google tech searches.

[..]

> I was hoping someone knew about this and had already hacked this hoax, 


If he sounds like Dave Emory, then there isn't much debunking that's required.

Food for thought and grounds for further research,

Eric



Re: An interesting thread...Hacking Bluetooth

2004-12-23 Thread Tyler Durden
No way it's Dave Emory...they did an IP Traceroute and the guy appears to be 
in Germany. If you've listened to Emory's shows, you'd know from some of his 
technical statements that he most likely wouldn't be capable of this. I also 
simply can't imagine him bothering with something like this.

On the other hand, the perpetrator of this hoax knows a decent amount about 
a variety of subjects (including technical ones). After sleeping on it, I'm 
starting to think he's actually some kind of German conspiracy 'theorist' 
who's actually been snooping the WiFi, etc...of some interesting locations. 
He probably saw a "pattern" and convinced himself he had to save the world.

It's a very interesting thread to say the least. Forget whether Paul 
Wolfowitz has some "Hidden Hand" master plan...it'll probably make 
Dis-information History one day.

-TD
From: Eric Murray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: An interesting thread...Hacking Bluetooth
Date: Wed, 22 Dec 2004 20:36:36 -0800
On Wed, Dec 22, 2004 at 09:48:01PM -0500, Tyler Durden wrote:
> Oh no, it gets really interesting. He claims to be an ex-German TLA-type
> (how many Ls do German TLAs normally have?), and had advanced knowledge 
of
> 9/11. That's not super-implausible.

[..]
> Me? I suspect he just pulled all this shit from David Emory's shows and 
then
> added some nice google tech searches.

[..]
> I was hoping someone knew about this and had already hacked this hoax,
If he sounds like Dave Emory, then there isn't much debunking that's 
required.

Food for thought and grounds for further research,
Eric



Re: An interesting thread...Hacking Bluetooth

2004-12-22 Thread Eugen Leitl
On Wed, Dec 22, 2004 at 02:13:52PM -0500, Tyler Durden wrote:

> "Here4s another myth: you cannot hack bluetooth from a distance of more 
> than 40 metres. Not true. My technical partner Felix can crack it at over 
> half a kilometre. Which is why he enjoys driving around so much in areas 

The official record right now is 1.74 km:

http://www.heise.de/newsticker/meldung/49907
http://trifinite.org/trifinite_stuff_bluebug.html#news

No doubt you can do much better with a large dish, and good alignment, as
well as a clear line of sight.

> where we know British, American, Israeli or Russian ops are living or 
> working. The great thing about many German cities is that most affordable 
> residences are within metres of the street anyway."
> 
> Any comments?

Bluetooth attacks aren't exactly new. No idea what else that tinfoil-hatted
person is spouting.

-- 
Eugen* Leitl http://leitl.org";>leitl
__
ICBM: 48.07078, 11.61144http://www.leitl.org
8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A  7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE
http://moleculardevices.org http://nanomachines.net


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Re: An interesting thread...Hacking Bluetooth

2004-12-22 Thread Roy M. Silvernail
Tyler Durden wrote:
There's some guy ("German Guy") spouting some coherent-sounding 
conspiracy theories over here:

http://www.godlikeproductions.com/bbs/message.php?page=23&topic=10&message=54181&mpage=1&showdate=12/18/04 

I wouldn't normally post something like this, but the guy's done a 
little bit of homework on a huge variety of topics, so it's really an 
excellent hoax, seen from a distance.

Here's on thing giving me some doubts, though (but of course if this 
is true he may have just pulled it from Google somewhere):

"Here4s another myth: you cannot hack bluetooth from a distance of 
more than 40 metres. Not true. My technical partner Felix can crack it 
at over half a kilometre. Which is why he enjoys driving around so 
much in areas where we know British, American, Israeli or Russian ops 
are living or working. The great thing about many German cities is 
that most affordable residences are within metres of the street anyway."

Any comments?
http://www.engadget.com/entry/3093445122266423/
I believe they went a bit over a kilometer at Defcon (against a knowing 
volunteer, so they say) from a hotel rooftop.

The rest sounds perfectly plausible, as well.  WEP is Swiss cheese, guys 
tell their girlfriends too much and girlfriends gossip amongst themselves.

Nothing to see here.  Move along.
--
Roy M. Silvernail is [EMAIL PROTECTED], and you're not
"It's just this little chromium switch, here." - TFT
SpamAssassin->procmail->/dev/null->bliss
http://www.rant-central.com


An interesting thread...Hacking Bluetooth

2004-12-22 Thread Tyler Durden
There's some guy ("German Guy") spouting some coherent-sounding conspiracy 
theories over here:

http://www.godlikeproductions.com/bbs/message.php?page=23&topic=10&message=54181&mpage=1&showdate=12/18/04
I wouldn't normally post something like this, but the guy's done a little 
bit of homework on a huge variety of topics, so it's really an excellent 
hoax, seen from a distance.

Here's on thing giving me some doubts, though (but of course if this is true 
he may have just pulled it from Google somewhere):

"HereĀ“s another myth: you cannot hack bluetooth from a distance of more than 
40 metres. Not true. My technical partner Felix can crack it at over half a 
kilometre. Which is why he enjoys driving around so much in areas where we 
know British, American, Israeli or Russian ops are living or working. The 
great thing about many German cities is that most affordable residences are 
within metres of the street anyway."

Any comments?
-TD