Laptop Anti-Theft Devices 237
mathin writes: "The NYTimes has an interesting article about laptop theft 'alarms' and services to help track down your laptop if it's swiped." Laptops are a lot like bicycles: if you have a 50-pound laptop, it doesn't need a lock.
Nice if... (Score:1, Funny)
Reactive Loss Prevention (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Reactive Loss Prevention (Score:2)
Insurance companies tend not to deny coverage to people (except the really bad drivers). they like to have people, and charge them A LOT
Mine was stolen (Score:5, Interesting)
When I got back home, I tried to boot up and nothing happened after the fan kicked on. After a couple of minutes of jiggling the power cord wire, I opened the case and found that my processor was stolen along with my two 64MB ram units. Someone had bothered to open it up, take the stuff, and close it again
That is definitely a situation in which tracking would not have helped.
A couple of minutes (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Mine was stolen (Score:2, Funny)
Perhaps a fear of the unit having a tracking device is what made the thief steal only the components? Now that would be ironic...
Re:Mine was NOT stolen (Score:2, Funny)
they did steal my laptop case to carry off the contents of my change jar, damn crackheads.
Re:Mine was stolen (Score:1)
Re:Mine was stolen (Score:1)
Re: I wondered about that too.... (Score:2)
Re:Mine was stolen (Score:1)
Locking the car door, probably.
IMO you were asking for it. You can't trust anyone these days.
Re:Mine was stolen (Score:4, Funny)
Was your laptop sitting in a bathtub full of ice with a note on the windshield telling you to call 911 [google.com]?
50 pounds? (Score:2)
If your laptop is 50 pounds, it's not really a laptop, is it?!
Re:50 pounds? (Score:1)
It is if you're Galactus, devourer of worlds. =)
Re:50 pounds? (Score:4, Funny)
You don't know how big his lap is.
Osbourne One (Score:2)
Re:Osbourne One (Score:2)
Re:Osbourne One (Score:2)
Useless (Score:1)
I should probably be surprised that people would do this,
but I work Tech Support, so I deal with people
all day, and know how stupid they are.
Re:Useless (Score:2)
If I'm in public somewhere, I'm not leaving my laptop unattended.
actually what I do whenever I get a new laptop (this is my third, none stolen, just upgrades) is to remove the hard drive retaining screw; the drive is usually in some kind of carrier that is connected to the rest of the laptop by a single screw. Whenever I go somewhere and I don't want to lug the laptop with me, I pop out the drive. Laptops are easily replaced and are insurable. Backups I have but it's still a pain in the ass and if I'm out for a few days the work isn't backed up. The data loss is far worse than the actual theft.
michael: (Score:4, Funny)
- A.P.
Re:michael: (Score:2, Funny)
Re:michael: (Score:2)
Re:michael: (Score:1)
The Information can be worth more than the laptop (Score:5, Interesting)
Pogue's article had some great things to say about the technology of tracking down stolen laptops. It would have been good to make the point that, many times, the information on the laptop is worth far more than the laptop itself.
About 18 months ago Qualcomm's CEO had his laptop swiped [computerworld.com] during a conference. The laptop was thought to have all kinds of trade secrets. Losing a several-thousand dollar laptop was a trivial loss for the CEO. But shareholders were rightfully worried that Qualcomm's strategies for implementing CDMA rollout were now in the hands of rivals. To my knowledge, they never got the laptop back. And the theft was, I suspect, for the hard drive's trade secrets rather than for the actual laptop.
Re:The Information can be worth more than the lapt (Score:1)
Re:The Information can be worth more than the lapt (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm not saying that this is necessarily easy to achieve in a way that the average meeting-going PHB finds usable but which his 13yr daughter can't crack in 5 minutes, but reasonable levels of protection are feasible.
Of course, you have to rely on the PHB not writing down pass-phrases and leaving them plainly visible.
Re:The Information can be worth more than the lapt (Score:2)
You mean, like using the Marquee/Ticker screensaver and having the password scroll by after 15 minutes of inactivity?
GTRacer
- My password is "password"
Oh Please - that's a CEO (Score:2)
It wouldn't be the first time.
Anyways, I'm sure he was most distraught about losing his OutLook contact list. Which, of course, isn't the company standard, but that's what the CEO wanted to use.
Weight... (Score:1)
Well, I'm glad that I kept my Mac Portable, which weighs in at 21 pounds. Let's see some schmoe try to steal that...
would be great if.... (Score:2, Interesting)
50 pound bikes (Score:1)
Gr
deterrants (Score:4, Interesting)
this statistic was startling:
As many as 30 percent of the stolen laptops are gone for good because they are never used to go online after being stolen.
Never mind that If I had a system like that I would just wipe the drive to begin with. Of course, common crooks may not bother.
Re:deterrants (Score:1)
I'm sure most people who steal laptops are more interested in selling parts than whole systems. It's much easier to track the machine in a coherent body than it would be a Hard drive here, and memory chip here.
NYT (Score:1)
use some wels hooks (Score:1)
a primitive but very effective anti-thefth device
My Solution (Score:1)
50 pounds? (Score:2)
Dude! (Score:4, Interesting)
you: Tilt left - right - back to arm laptop, and leave...
you : come back and tilt laptop right - back - left
Person outside looking in sees you do this and comes in and takes your laptop, disarming it with your (super secret password tilt combo) while you feel secure cause you spent a hundred dollars on a security device.
what a joke, that method shouldn't even exist, too many stupid users are gonna use it.
Re:Dude! (Score:1)
What do you do for Linux laptops?
Re:Dude! (Score:2)
The third is utterly insane to have as an option for a security device.
why not just have a voice password that you have to say in a loud articulate voice from five feet away.
Re:Dude! (Score:2)
A desktop button that calls cdetach, ssh-add -D, and xscreensaver.
Re:Dude! (Score:5, Interesting)
The sensitivity of the angles you tilt, for instance, is something like within 1 degree, and the acceleration parameters are also extremely precise (so, for instance, if you lift the laptop an inch or two while also tilting it, this counts).
Surprisingly, it's actually NOT that difficult to duplicate your own motions - muscle memory is far more precise than I ever thought.
But, really, until you try it you can't imagine how difficult it really it to duplicate even simple motion passwords.
Re:Dude! (Score:2, Funny)
Gosh, I'll bet you felt silly!
Re:Dude! (Score:2)
Re:Dude! (Score:2)
Lets see them steal this one :D (Score:1)
Osborne 1 computer
http://www.obsoletecomputermuseum.org/osborne/o
Ive seen devices that has a button on your belt buckle and a battery on the case, if it walks, press the button on the bat belt.
ZAAAAAAAAAAAP. Watch them wriggle in a pile of piddle shuddering and slobbering
Re:Lets see them steal this one :D (Score:1)
The Osborne was the first "portable" (really, luggable) computer. The first with a built-in monitor (only 3" viewable, diagonally). The case was a from a portable sewing machine. But they weighed only 25 pounds!
We didn't have or need anti-theft devices in those days. Most thieves didn't know what it was.
Re:Lets see them steal this one :D (Score:2)
What's pretty funny now (but was actually pretty useful at the time!) is the screen magnifier accessory I got with mine. It was a big square magnifying glass on a metal rod that velcro'd to the top of the Osborne, so it sat about 6 inches in front of the tiny monitor display. Presto, more readable screen!
Hard drive wiper (Score:2, Funny)
I remember a few years back when me and a few friends were continuously scared of getting a knock on the door from the authorities, we had ideas to develop a device to entirely wipe the hard drive.
Initially, this consisted of a coil of thick guage copper wire around the HD, which was in turn connected across the mains supply. Guaranteed to fuck over the HD big time.
Problem was, that we never had the guts to put one round our main HD, because we knew that whatever mechanism used, it could get accidently turned on.
We also worried about, if the police did turn up, how would we know whether it was a friendly visit or not, then wipe or HDs for no reason.
All because of the anarchists cookbook and about 10 porn pictures.....
Re:Hard drive wiper (Score:2)
We also worried about, if the police did turn up, how would we know whether it was a friendly visit or not, then wipe or HDs for no reason.
If you are that paranoid, then you would never assume that the police were showing up for a "friendly visit"... :)
Re:Hard drive wiper (Score:2)
The one time the Feds did show up to confiscate the hardware was long before I started hanging out there...
The end of laptop theft as we know it! (Score:5, Funny)
Don't want to create a login for NYTimes? (Score:1)
password = slashdot
Insturance (Score:4, Interesting)
I was working in a corner of a cafe late at night when I guy came in, sat beside me, stuck a knife to my side and said "put the laptop in the bag".
My laptop was locked to the table, but I gladly unlocked it in return for my safety.
Anyway, insurance covered the loss.
Also, I had a removable hard drive with all my work on it, and I pleaded with the thief to let me keep it, and he let me!
So ultimately, I ended up with a newer machine, and a spare drive, and the thief ended up with a password protected laptop. Just goes to show, crime doesn't pay.
Re:Insturance (Score:3, Interesting)
I'll top that. Friend of mine came out of the University about 1am, and locked up behind him. Three guys grabbed him, showed him the knife and said "Play nice". They hailed a cab, put him in it, and said "Take us to your apartment," which he did. They then took him up, sat him on the floor, and carefully cleaned the place out, including his laptop (and the keys to the University), and made it utterly clear to him what would happen if he reported any of this. He said that it was a surreal experience, and the scariest thing was how utterly casual and bored they were, like they could not give a fuck how many people saw them, whether he shouted for help, or whether they knifed him or not. On the bright side, they did pay for the cab.
Well, crime probably paid about $50, the price of a "good cosmetic condition, fails to boot" laptop on eBay, or at the local fence. And that's rather the point about laptop security: it doesn't matter how bad you make the proposition look, if someone decides to take your laptop (or cell phone, or anything else) they're going to do it. You will have to make the decision whether it's worth carrying something so valuable that you're prepared to risk your life protecting it. I think that you (and my friend) made the right decision. "Hero" tends to be a posthumous epithet, barring superior firepower and the opportunity and will to use it.
The flipside of all this is: never, ever buy goods in a "too good to be true" deal from someone who's not keen to answer questions on where they came from, because more often that not, there's a victim in there somewhere. Are we all quite clear on that?
Re:Insturance (Score:2)
Not really a mugging (Score:2)
How (not) to react to attempted laptop theft (Score:2)
Agreed.
An interesting statistic -- generally an attacker with a knife is much more likely to cut a victim to 'show he means business' than an attacker with a gun. Generally, people attacked by a gun-wielding assaliant are less likely to be injured.
Guns don't slice (Score:2)
If there's any inference to be made here, I don't think it's that gun muggers have more self-discipline than knife muggers. It seems obvious to me that anybody who uses intentional injury as a form of communication would prefer a knife to a gun. Despite all the "just wing him" scenes in the movies, a shooter can't really control whether a gunshot is fatal. I don't know much about the professional standards in the your-money-or-your-life business, but unnecessary homicides would seem to be counterproductive. On the other hand, empathy is obviously not a professional qualificantion....
Re:Guns don't slice... coke heads do. (Score:2)
For some real enlightenment, check out the statistics on the percentage of murder victims with cocaine in their bloodstream.
The unpopular inference is that firearms restrictions may actually increase the number of victims injured in these crimes. According to the cops, such crimes are acts of desparation by addicts in withdrawal, so they are not entirely rational... but they also want an easy quiet crime that won't make the newspapers.Laptops are a popular target because they are easy to turn into cash, and often left unattended. This makes them more attractive than say, a purse, which may or may not contain items of value.
Darn coke heads (Score:2)
Still, we weren't talking about street zombies with a declining brain cell count. We were talking about professional thieves carrying out carefully planned robberies.
Re:Darn coke heads (Score:2)
Re:Insturance (Score:2)
I was working in a corner of a cafe late at night when I guy came in, sat beside me, stuck a knife to my side and said "put the laptop in the bag".
My laptop was locked to the table, but I gladly unlocked it in return for my safety.
You, sir, are a terrorist enabler!
Laptop security (Score:2)
I can't understand why people will pay thousands of dollars for a piece of machinery, then carlessly leave it at a table or seat while they go off and do something else. Even if it's company equipment, somebody paid for that laptop. I think these are the same people who leave their car running with the keys in the ignition while they drop off their 3-day-late movie at Blockbuster, or run into store to grab a coke. It never hurts to be overly cautious.
When I'm at work, I lock the laptop down with one of those 4-digit combo locks attached to a metal wire. I know that any person with an interest in my $2500 machine can come along with a pair of wire cutters and hack off the wire. Having the lock on there is to basically keep the honest people honest. When I leave for lunch I take off the combo lock and lock the laptop up in my drawer. When I'm done for the day I pack everything up and take it back home with me.
Noise alarms are just annoying and don't really help, much like car alarms. When's the last time you ran towards an alarm, thinking to help overpower a thief? If anything, like the article says, the thief would just chuck the alarm card, or better yet feign embarassment while pretending it really is his/her laptop.
Simply paying attention to your surroundings and taking that extra step to secure your laptop will often work better than more expensive options, which unfortunately might cause people to let down their guard.
Tracking device? (Score:1)
I suppose some might consider that a privacy issue, but I don't think it would be if it's a service you could pay for.
Just a thought.
IBM (Score:4, Informative)
Like a fish needs a laptop (Score:1)
Here is something useful... (Score:1)
With wireless being put on-chip, I don't think this will be a problem forever. There's too much marketing money at stake for companies not to know where you are all times.
Use a pencil and paper! The handwriting recognition is great!
This seems like it would be pretty useless (Score:1)
Re:This seems like it would be pretty useless (Score:2)
The scenario is this (based on several true stories): Somebody leaves their laptop in a conference room/another's office/their own cube, unlocked. A well-dressed stranger, perhaps present for a "meeting" wanders up, picks up the laptop, and proceeds to simply walk out, looking very proper and professional with the laptop under his arm. Don't forget, this could easily be an employee of the company stealing another employee's machine (which also happens quite a bit).
Caveo technology is great for this scenario. Clearly if the PC is emitting a piercing alarm (I've heard it, and it is truly loud), the fellow would attract attention if he were walking towards the door. Similarly, were he to eject and toss the card, it still screams, leading everyone to do a quick "Where's my laptop" check at a minimum, and alerts the receptionist/folks around the door to take note of who is leaving, etc.
I think this solution fits best into a corporate setting as a deterrent to inside-job theft, rather than a deterrant to somebody reaching into your car and grabbing your notebook (though, you'd have to think that many less savvy crooks would drop a notebook pretty quick if it started to wail and really did turn heads).
Re:This seems like it would be pretty useless (Score:2)
Eject card, slide under nearest locked door. Or simply, eject card apply hammer. This thing is just a pcmcia card, how long will it chirp after I've broken it in two? If I'm an employee, I already know all the laptops have these cards so I might be able to eject/smash the card before it goes off.
For this to be at all effective it would need to be built into the laptop and not easily removeable. Of all of the laptop anti-theft devices I think this is the most useless.
Re:This seems like it would be pretty useless (Score:2)
You're telling me this would be surreptitious way to sneak out with the laptop? That this would not attract undue attention?
Frankly, I'm pretty sure that simply letting the alarm go off (in an office that might have a couple of false alarms every few months) would be less noticable than somebody actually beginning to smash the card right in the middle of the conference room/cubicle land space. Consider also that for an office used to the sound of the alarm and it's de-activation (again, from testing and sporadic false alarms), a very abrubt, unnatural end to the alarm would raise some eyebrows.
Any of the options you talk about would attract a great deal of attention in any office building I've ever worked in (including somebody walking around with a blaring PCMCIA card looking for a locked door to stick it under). The way employees and well-dressed strangers wander off with others' laptops is by looking completely normal - totally blending in and thus remaining invisible. Any of the approaches you talk about above immediately point out the perpetrator as not following normal behavior patterns.
Re:This seems like it would be pretty useless (Score:2)
Yeah, right. Like that won't attract the attention of the geek in the next cube:
(shuffle shuffle) BEEPBEEPBEEPBEEPBEEP BANG! BEEPBEEPFUCKBEEPBANG! BEEPBEEPBEEPBEEPBANGBANGBANG! (silence)
Useless... (Score:2)
Wow...sounds really hard to get around! Once criminals know how the card works, it'd be quite easy to get around.
Huh? (Score:2)
Laptops are a lot like bicycles: if you have a 50-pound laptop, it doesn't need a lock.
What the hell are you talking about? If I have a 50 pound bicycle, that's too heavy to ride away?
And 50 pounds of laptop is too heavy to lug away? Maybe 200 pounds, but sheesh I could carry 50 pounds under my arm (I am bigger and stronger than average, though). Not to mention a 50 pound laptop would probably have a handle.
Oh wait, it's michael posting the story. Never mind.
Obtanium (Score:1)
On the contrary, they make great low power cluster nodes. Jusd leave yours here, I'll watch after it while your gone.
Missing the point (Score:3, Informative)
The best laptop-theft-prevention is staying with the computer. That may be where wearable computers have their best value. A computer around your belt with a glasses-style display won't be easily forgotten.
A few points (Score:5, Interesting)
If you don't want your laptop stolen, don't ever let it get into a situation where it can be stolen, because (people being what they are) it will be. And if you think you absolutely can't live without your laptop, do yourself a favour and evaluate what you actually mean by that. Chances are you'll find it's simply not true.
Re:A few points (Score:2)
It sounds like a good idea, but only seems to work for items of a very small value (books, for example).
For larger items, somebody always takes advantage of the program, or something else happens to queer the deal or give some beancounter the impression that the program is not doing enough to "enhance shareholder value".
At many major corporations, the company routinely gives away old office furniture, but refuses to give away (or even sell) old computer equipment to employees. Most of it goes to the trash compators.
WTF is PC PhoneHome? (Score:2)
Ignoring however they manage to provide this GPS in software, and how they manage to send email via a variety of possible transports (without being detectable at the OS level, they claim to run at a much lower level), they have one claim in particular that is mind-boggling:
They have a couple of versions, the freeware version does everything above, and the $30 version claims that it can't be removed from a hard disk with "fdisk, low-level format, or format".
I think they're pushing snake oil. If they actually do everything they claim to do, I'd love to find out how. Does anyone have any experience with them?
Re:WTF is PC PhoneHome? (Score:2)
Re:WTF is PC PhoneHome? (Score:2)
Actually they say nothing about low-level format on their site. Ordinary MS format for a hdd is a filesystem creation today, not like a floppy disk format. Usually only very little gets overwritten. Same with MS fdisk. Things are a little different with Linux.
Basically they lie by omission. Doing a disk wipe (e.g. "cat
The statement Cannot be removed by unauthorized parties even if they attempt to wipe the computer's hard drive using format or fdisk commands. is completely true, as a harddisk cannot be wiped with format or fdisk!
Of course that is not the meaning most people will read into this.
Slight problem (Score:2, Insightful)
When you intend to leave your laptop unattended, if only for a moment, you can "arm" it in any of several ways: by clicking a button, by using a taskbar menu or, if the lid is closed, by tilting it to three particular angles in a specific sequence
Slight problem that makes this useless - you have to remember to arm it, ie. your laptop is switched on, and the battery has not run dry. If you've got to remember to pick it up and hold it upside down you might as well just put it into hibernate mode, it saves power, and let the BIOS password deal with the thief.
The *real* problem is that laptops are stolen when you turn your back for a second because you're thinking of something else (without thinking "I should engage the security device by going dancing with my laptop"). If you are going to walk away from the laptop then *take it with you* or use BIOS-protected APM.
Even if it does work, the thief will know the alarm is activated so he'll pull out his gun and shoot you while he runs away. Or he might shoot you *before* he takes the laptop. I think I'll take the insurance payout instead ;-)
Re:Slight problem (Score:2)
That is bullshit. I used to hang out with Chicago cops -- "mugger shoots victim" is a rare story, and the truth is usually "mob hit disguised as mugging misreported by media".
Shooting people is noisy, messy, and tends to get a lot of investigative attention.
The average thief is some crackhead looking for an easy score so he can get his next fix, or the twichty low-level manager in the next cubicle over funding his cocaine habit (or covering his E-trade margin account losses).
In either case, snatch-and-grab robbers tend to be unarmed, and even armed robbers don't want to shoot you, they want an easy quiet getaway from a 'property crime' that likely won't even result in a police report.
It's a big step from "burglar" or "mugger" to "murderer". Even in the worst of the projects, few people are so far out of it that they will take that step for the hundred bucks your laptop will gain them.
The thief isn't going to care about the BIOS password, he just wants to hand it off to his fence for fifty or a hundred bucks. The fence will see that it powers up, then add it to a bulk lot of other laptops, which will go to a wholesaler that knows how to get around BIOS passwords.Don't believe me? Buy your local beat cop a pint and ask him yourself.
Re:Slight problem (Score:2)
If it wasn't so tragic, I'd make some quip about how London deserves this sort of result after turning themselves into a nation of disarmed victims. But no city 'deserves' a high crime rate, even if they have instituted the equivalent of "OSHA for criminals [go.com]"
Compare your london carjacking story [thisislondon.co.uk] with the stories about this Louisiana law [emory.edu], where even the staunchest oppponents of the change admit that it has a deterrant effect. If things are that bad, why not leave? Why stay in a country where self-defense is a criminal act [cybersurf.co.uk]?Re:Slight problem (Score:2)
The difficult choice is what do do when having a couple of drinks with dinner [packing.org]...
ifup (Score:2)
This gave me an idea for protecting my wife's laptop.
I edited the ifup script to e-mail the IP address to me. I want the thief to use the computer for a long period of time, and use it repeatedly, so I can track them. There is an autologin feature available for gdm and kdm, so I enabled it (I didn't know it could be used as a security feature). I also put some familiar looking icons on the desktop so the thief will feel at home and use the machine frequently, and hopefully they will click the big "connect to internet" icon.
Of course, I usually just use this to eject the CD-ROM when my wife is using the computer. I think it's funny, but I think she rolls her eyes. I can't be sure. Maybe a webcam...
Re:ifup (Score:2)
Laptop Bag? (Score:3, Funny)
My wife has a Pismo G3 from her employer, whose IT department bought her a Targus laptop bag with the order because "We do it for all Laptop orders". Never mind the fact that the bag was obviously made to fit a boxy PC laptop, not the curvy Pismo. Ultimately, she found a backpack with a laptop compartment built in, and bought it herself. She's willing to trade the fact that her laptop bag doesn't look "Professional" (read: pretentious) for the fact that nobody knows its a laptop bag. Nobody's stolen it yet....
And the Targus laptop bag is sitting somewhere on a spare desk in her department. Nobody else wants to use it, either.
Re:Laptop Bag? (Score:3, Funny)
Targus laptop bags and the opposite of stealth. (Score:5, Funny)
I'm very very happy with Targus -- not just the quality, but also the support (broke the strap two years after getting the bag, they sent a new, improved strap, for free).
The big drawback to Targus bags is that they are heavy. That is also their strength, as the bag takes a lot of abuse, saving the laptop inside from harm.
Speaking of a good way to keep a laptop from being stolen is to not put it in a bag that screams, "There's a laptop in this bag!" , I have a pile of clean old Compaq laptop bags without the laptops...
These bags scream "There is a Compaq Laptop in this bag!", though there isn't -- I give them to family members to use as briefcases, lunch bags, and even keep one in the back of my truck to hold my jumper cables.
Nobody has stolen my jumper cables or my nieces schoolbooks... yet.
Great for student laptops (Score:2)
And my employer has ceased to deploy physical security measures, figuring that insurance will replace anything, and usually with more up to date equipment.
Now whether or not this is cost effective is another issue.
"foolproof" (Score:2)
I find the bolded part above a bit distressing. When I started readinga bout the Caveo card I assumed that the card becomes physically secured to the machine by some means or another. I imagined that there would perhaps be a short cable to the anti-theft jack that seem to exist on all new machines.
Imagine a car alarm on the exterior of a car, where a thief could just rip the blaring siren off and ditch it while driving away. Not that car alarms are 100% effective, but at least it's a somewhat pain in the ass to disable by comparison.
This also brings up another problem with laptops. PCMCIA cards in general are quite easy to remove, especially those wireless cards which protrude a good half-inch or more out of the PCMCIA slot. Ethernet and modem cards are relatively cheap these days, but wireless cards, hard drives, video input devices, and other toys are not. Even batteries and internal hard-drives are easy to grab, and they can bring in some good cash. A good crook could clear out a few thousand dollars worth of hardware in about 10 minutes, all inconspicuously since these things are quite pocketable.
Anyway, after using a notebook for quite some time and having one stolen at the office while I took a nap (all nighters suck) I would say the most cost effective theft-detterrant for the machine is the combo-lock/key notebook cable. They're a lot cheaper, more reliable to arm, and look more secure than the $100+ fancy alternatives proposed in the article above. I would argue that a cable-locked notebook looks like a serious pain in the ass to mess with, since it entails snippers and the like. I think the products mentioned in the NYtimes article might be good only when combined with a cable lock, but definitely not alone.
So does anyone know of ways to physically secure PCMCIA devices?
Theft of small parts from "secured" laptops (Score:2)
Computer stores learned this the hard way. Used to be, when you went to the CDW showroom half the floor model laptops (locked down with a cable lock) would have been stripped of every removeable part, from hard drives to taking a screwdriver to the bottom access panel and stripping out the RAM.
Lately CDW locks the laptops up with this wire bondage cage that makes component removal more difficult, but you still see the occasional machine where a small hand has managed to wiggle out the 2.5 hard drive, etc.
My oldest laptop is designed so when the cable lock is in the 'security slot', you cannot remove the hard drive.
Some Toshiba models have two points to attach a cable lock, the second being below the (plastic) door that covers the PCMCIA slots. Attach a physically large security lock, and you block access to the eject button and/or the cards.Cheap, lightweight anti-theft devices (Score:2)
Make sure that any model numbers on it somehow suggest that it is a 386, and that its screen is either black and white, or passive-matrix.
Cover all non-legacy ports with a plate having dummy serial ports or somesuch.
The CDROM drive should be made to look like a 5.25 inch floppy drive. (I don't know if notebooks ever had those, but hey, nothing wrong with overkill)
Is anyone gonna steal this thing?
Re:Motion unlock code? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Motion unlock code? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:One big problem with these solutions... (Score:2)
Unfortunately not. Unless you have encrypted harddisk partitions (which is _not_ a password protection, but orders of magnitude more secure), a new linux root password can be set with a bootdisk, if neccessary after transplanding the harddisk to another computer.
As a second step, there is a fine utility to reset a w2k admin password from Linux. I recently forgot my admin passwod for w2k on my Vaio, because I usually use Linux, and was able to set a new password with this [eunet.no] utility.
On the other hand if you actually mean encrypted partitions by "password protection", that is a very good means to protect your data from equipment theft.
You didn't read the article (Score:2)
In the article, it mentions that those systems will need to be brought up and conected to the internet. Based upon the intelligence of most criminals, do you think they will know how to alter a Linux password?
Again, do you think that they will know that there is a Linux partition if that is only accesible with a boot disk?
One last thing. If a thief of my laptop actually knew how to overcome what you have described. Why the hell would he/she hook the system up to the internet? They would peruse my hard drive for files they might like, then wipe the drives clean and put what they want on the machine. Then and only then would they hit the internet with the laptop.
Does that make it clearer as to why that software is useless to me?
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The problem that I am referring to is how useless that software would be for me, since the thief would be unable to access my system, let alone get it on the internet without wiping the hard drive.