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Whitewash

04/15/06 7:08 PM

#116943 RE: x-point #116942

Nice post x-point. I agree with you completely. All the Dell's, HP's, IBM's, Gateways, fingerprint readers, smart card readers etc will need Wave. Thanks for keeping us all updated on the Army contract. Jeff
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Bacala

04/15/06 7:35 PM

#116944 RE: x-point #116942

x-point: You would think that the Army would have been using WAVE technology on there flash and hard drives by now. This story just blows me away that the information was not encrypted. I just don't know what to make of this whole PC security business. Thanks for your reply..

April 15, 2006
At Afghan Bazaar, Military Offers Dollars for Stolen Data
By CARLOTTA GALL
BAGRAM, Afghanistan, April 14 — An American military officer, flanked by six powerfully built bodyguards, stood in the muddy streets of the bazaar here on Friday buying up all the computer flash drives he could find, handing out cash for the finger-thin components that have been disappearing by the score — some of them with copies of secret military files — from the air base nearby.

This was clearly the United States military's way of dealing with the news, reported by The Los Angeles Times on Monday, that sensitive military information stored on portable computer drives could be found on sale in the bazaar outside the base at Bagram. The military has ordered an investigation into the allegations and a review of security policy regarding computer hardware and software. But to retrieve the lost material, the military decided to rely on the almighty dollar.

Pulling a clump of cash out of his pocket, the officer, who wore a bulletproof vest and a pistol at his side, but no name tag, joked and gently haggled with Afghans proffering the drives. He ended up paying what is, for here, a considerable sum: $35 apiece for most of them. Afghan boys, clearly acting for others, held out handfuls of flash drives, some looking brand new and others with marks of use.

"Slow down," the officer said every so often to his translator as the clamor rose around him. "I'll pay, I'll pay, there's no problem." A burly Special Forces soldier guarded the officer's back and moved away youths who kept swarming around to see what was going on.

The officer declined to comment about his activity, but when asked if this was the best way the military could retrieve stolen computer material, he nodded. "They're not bad people," he said.

Shopkeepers said the military had considered raiding the ramshackle bazaar, which stretches on both sides of the road for a few hundred yards leading to the entrance of the base. But the shop owners refused to comply, and the local government administrator convinced the military that paying for the goods would be a more successful ploy, one shopkeeper said.

The tiny shops in the bazaar are crammed with electronic goods, military gear and Western foodstuffs, most of which appeared to have come from the air base. Military cots stand out in front of the stores, and sleeping bags, military boots and camouflage uniforms are stacked at the entrances, some of them clearly used and perhaps discarded.

Inside, every shop has a glass counter of military watches, sunglasses, knives and flashlights. Boxes of energy bars, muscle-building supplements and Tabasco sauce line the shelves. Some goods are still in plastic cases and have clearly come from the store on the base, but the low prices — T-shirts carrying price tags of $24.99 sell for just $4 in the Afghan shops — suggest that they did not arrive legally.

One shopkeeper had dusty laptop computers piled in a corner and a half-dozen battered DVD players on his counter. Two of the computers had broken screens, but a third seemed to be in working order. They were selling for $100 each.

"They collect a lot of the stuff from the rubbish," one teenager said.

But another shopkeeper, who declined to give his name, said, "We know most of it is stolen."

The small group of American soldiers ignored most of the contraband on Friday, but after a couple of hours trawling through the shops they carried off some camouflage clothing in large plastic bags, and a cloth bag full of a few hundred flash drives. They had bought up virtually every flash drive in the bazaar and must have spent thousands of dollars.

"Sold out — they bought them all," said one shopkeeper. "But come tomorrow, we'll have more."