GOVERNMENT AND COMPUTER MANUFACTURERS CAUGHT INSTALLING HARD-WIRED KEYSTROKE LOGGERS INTO ALL NEW LAPTOP COMPUTERS!
Turner Radio Network | October 4, 2005
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COMMENT: |
Devices capture everything you ever type then can send it via your Ethernet card to the Dept. of Homeland Security without your knowledge, consent or a search warrant each time you log onto the internet!
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Freedom Of Information Act Requests For Explanation From DHS, refused. I was opening up my almost brand new laptop, to replace a broken PCMCIA slot riser on the motherboard. As soon as I got the keyboard off, I noticed a small cable running from the keyboard connection underneath a piece of metal protecting the motherboard. |
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I figured "No Big Deal", and continued with the disassembly. But when I got the metal panels off, I saw a small white heat shrink-wrapped package. Being ever curious, I sliced the heat shrink open. I found a little circuit board inside.

Being an EE by trade, this piqued my curiosity
considerably. On one side of the board, one Atmel
AT45D041A
four megabit Flash memory chip.

On the other side, one Microchip
Technology PIC16F876
Programmable Interrupt Controller, along with a little Fairchild
Semiconductor CD4066BCM
quad bilateral switch.
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Looking further, I saw that the other end of
the cable was connected to the integrated Ethernet board. A little more research, and I found that that board spliced in between the keyboard and the Ethernet chip is little more than a Key ghost hardware key logger. |
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The reasons a computer manufacturer would put
this in their laptops can only be left up to your imagination. It would be very
impractical to hand-analyze the logs, and very CPU-intensive to do so on a
computer for every person that purchased a laptop. Why are these key loggers
here? I recently almost found out.
I called the police, as having a key logger
unknown to me in my laptop is a serious offense. They told me to call the
Department of Homeland Security. At this point, I am in disbelief. Why would the
DHS have a key logger in my laptop? It was surreal.
So I called them, and they told me to submit a
Freedom of Information Act request. This is what I got back:
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Under the Freedom Of Information Act (FOIA) the
only items exempt from public disclosure are items relating to "law
enforcement tools and techniques" and "items relating to national
security."
The real life implications of this are plain:
Computer manufacturers appear to be cooperating with the Department of Homeland
Security to make every person who buys a new computer subject to immediate,
unrestricted government recording of everything they do on those computers! EVERYTHING!
This information can be sent to DHS, online,
without your knowledge or consent, without a search warrant or even probable
cause! That's why this device is hard-wired directly into the Ethernet card,
which communicates over the Internet!
I am not certain how long this information will
be permitted to remain online for the entire world to see before the government
takes some type of action to attempt to have it removed from public view. I URGE
you to take copy of this page immediately and spread this information to
everyone you know immediately! The more people who find out about this, the more
can protect themselves and raise a HUGE outcry to force government and computer
manufacturers to immediately CEASE installing these devices in new computers!
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