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Thread: Stolen laptop recovered upon AOL login.

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  1. #1
    Ed O'c Guest

    Stolen laptop recovered upon AOL login.

    "Yahoo (Reuters) is reporting that the FBI has caught the guy who
    stole computers from Wells Fargo. The interesting part is that
    'Investigators traced the computer to Krastof when he logged onto his
    own America Online account at home through one of the stolen
    computers.' Makes you wonder what sort of hooks the FBI has into AOL
    or other ISPs and what hardware identification is being transmitted at
    login."

    http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=0...tid=123&tid=99

  2. #2
    Jeffrey A. Setaro Guest

    Re: Stolen laptop recovered upon AOL login.

    In article <d0986416.0311290627.6b7b6069@posting.google.com >,
    salwithed@yahoo.com says...
    > "Yahoo (Reuters) is reporting that the FBI has caught the guy who
    > stole computers from Wells Fargo. The interesting part is that
    > 'Investigators traced the computer to Krastof when he logged onto his
    > own America Online account at home through one of the stolen
    > computers.' Makes you wonder what sort of hooks the FBI has into AOL
    > or other ISPs and what hardware identification is being transmitted at
    > login."
    >
    > http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=0...tid=123&tid=99
    >


    It's far more likely that Wells Fargo had installed Computrace Plus (or
    something similar) on the laptop.

    --
    Cheers-

    Jeff Setaro
    jasetaro <at> mags.net
    http://people.mags.net/jasetaro/
    PGP Key IDs DH/DSS: 0x5D41429D RSA: 0x599D2A99 New RSA: 0xA19EBD34

  3. #3
    Lance Hill Guest

    Re: Stolen laptop recovered upon AOL login.

    Jeffrey A. Setaro wrote:
    > salwithed@yahoo.com says...
    >> "Yahoo (Reuters) is reporting that the FBI has caught the guy who
    >> stole computers from Wells Fargo. The interesting part is that
    >> 'Investigators traced the computer to Krastof when he logged onto his
    >> own America Online account at home through one of the stolen
    >> computers.' Makes you wonder what sort of hooks the FBI has into AOL
    >> or other ISPs and what hardware identification is being transmitted
    >> at login."
    >>
    >>

    http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=0...tid=123&tid=99
    >>

    >
    > It's far more likely that Wells Fargo had installed Computrace Plus
    > (or something similar) on the laptop.



    The San Francisco Chronicle reports the thief logged onto the laptop owner's
    AOL account.

    Full story here:
    http://************/wzub
    and a snip below.

    Lance
    *****

    The San Francisco Chronicle
    NOVEMBER 27, 2003, THURSDAY, FINAL EDITION
    SECTION: NEWS; Pg. A1; LAZARUS AT LARGE

    <snip>
    Still, Benjamin Jun, vice president of Cryptography Research, a San
    Francisco security consulting firm, said it looked like the case of the
    stolen Wells Fargo data came straight from "the crooks-are-dumb file."

    Investigators knew where to look for the gear not because of unusually
    intrepid sleuthing but because Krastof allegedly used the computer to log on
    to an AOL account belonging to the system's owner, Peter Gascoyne.

    This allowed authorities to eventually trace the call back to Krastof's
    residence, said the Police Department's White, who acknowledged that
    cracking the case was, as much as anything, a matter of pure luck.

    Jun at Cryptography Research said most people don't realize that they
    announce their presence and leave an electronic trail any time they go
    online.

    "Using a stolen computer to log onto the Net is like taking a stolen credit
    card (and) buying gas for all your friends at a single service station," he
    said. "It's pretty easy to get caught."
    <snip>



  4. #4
    Jeffrey A. Setaro Guest

    Re: Stolen laptop recovered upon AOL login.

    In article <bqagn6$21265h$1@ID-26139.news.uni-berlin.de>,
    lltbhill@linkearth.net says...
    > Jeffrey A. Setaro wrote:
    > > salwithed@yahoo.com says...
    > >> "Yahoo (Reuters) is reporting that the FBI has caught the guy who
    > >> stole computers from Wells Fargo. The interesting part is that
    > >> 'Investigators traced the computer to Krastof when he logged onto his
    > >> own America Online account at home through one of the stolen
    > >> computers.' Makes you wonder what sort of hooks the FBI has into AOL
    > >> or other ISPs and what hardware identification is being transmitted
    > >> at login."
    > >>
    > >>

    > http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=0...tid=123&tid=99
    > >>

    > >
    > > It's far more likely that Wells Fargo had installed Computrace Plus
    > > (or something similar) on the laptop.

    >
    >
    > The San Francisco Chronicle reports the thief logged onto the laptop owner's
    > AOL account.
    >


    ROFL... Sometimes they just make it way to easy (you gotta love dumb
    criminals).

    --
    Cheers-

    Jeff Setaro
    jasetaro <at> mags.net
    http://people.mags.net/jasetaro/
    PGP Key IDs DH/DSS: 0x5D41429D RSA: 0x599D2A99 New RSA: 0xA19EBD34

  5. #5
    Hootowl Guest

    Re: Stolen laptop recovered upon AOL login.

    On Sat, 29 Nov 2003 11:54:16 -0500, Jeffrey A. Setaro
    <jasetaro@SPAM.ME.NOT.mags.net> wrote:

    >In article <bqagn6$21265h$1@ID-26139.news.uni-berlin.de>,
    >lltbhill@linkearth.net says...


    >
    >ROFL... Sometimes they just make it way to easy (you gotta love dumb
    >criminals).


    As a former teacher in a correctional institution, let me assure you
    that, almost without exception, the criminal element is at the
    absolute rock bottom of the intellect scale.

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