All-seeing "I" - "I" as in Israhell

Started by yankeedoodle, May 23, 2018, 02:05:48 PM

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yankeedoodle

Israhell plots worldwide surveillance.  Just think about all-seeing eye at the top of the pyramid. 

Oh, sure, it's only for "criminals," they will tell you.  And, out of the other side of their mouths, they will tell you that "anti-semites" are criminals.  Did you just move your lips?  Did you just say "holohoax?"  Gotcha!!

Meet the Israeli company ready to sell citywide surveillance
https://www.cyberscoop.com/jenovice-cyber-labs-metropolink-city-wide-surveillance/

QuoteLarge public places, such as airports or shopping malls, have already been turned into surveillance free-for-alls, where people's every move is catalogued for the sake of profit. Now, one prominent company is ready to help governments spread that same surveillance technology over entire cities.

Israeli company Jenovice Cyber Labs is poised to launch new products that monitor everything from prisons to heavily populated areas, depending on what exactly customers want, CyberScoop has learned. It's a particularly provocative product coming in the wake of DHS detecting Stingray cellphone spying devices across Washington, D.C., but all too easy to fathom based on the way companies make millions off the collection of location-based data.

Jenovice's Metropolink, which is only available for law enforcement and intelligence agencies, is sold as an "autonomous" surveillance system meant to monitor entire metropolitan areas. The capabilities list reads like hacker tech from a Jason Bourne movie: It's advertised as being able to locate, list, map, track, analyze and visualize all Wi-Fi networks and identities across whatever environment a customer chooses.

The product works thanks to a network of sensors placed around a large populated area that track devices by identifiers including, but not limited to, MAC address and geolocation. Targets are usually phones that are broadcasting and collecting Wi-Fi information by default.

Product advertising lists the technology as "passive," an important distinction that's subject to less regulatory oversight than active attacks and exploits found in other products. Similarly, in many countries, Metropolink doesn't require a warrant, the company says.

Categorizing the product as "passive," however, doesn't tell the whole story. Like the company's long-distance Wi-Fi interception device Piranha, Metropolink can easily be used to inject malicious payloads into targets, according to a Jenovice employee. That capability can be added with a license upgrade.

Metropolink sensors possess a default collection range of about 500 meters, which can be enhanced depending on the hardware. The sensors then pass the data to a command center where its visualized for easy consumption. The company also promises that the devices can detect and track targets moving at high speeds in cars or motorcycles.