| http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?a
rticleid=6670BF9B-E7F2-99DF-3EAC1C6DC382972F
|
| A company is selling a window film that blocks most RF
signals. The
| obvious application is TEMPEST-shielding. I'm skeptical
that it will
| be very popular -- most sites won't want to give up
Blackberry and
| cell phones...
Real life follows fiction? There was a Law and Order
episode a year or
two back in which a high-tech company used some alleged
technology like
this - a fine mesh of wires over the windows. (An important
clue was
one of the detectives noticing that the mesh had been
disturbed.
Someone had replaced the wires in a small region with black
thread, then
hid a cell-phone repeater outside the window. As I recall,
the reason
for doing was just your typical hacker "you try to stop
me, I'll get
around you" trick.)
There were also reports not that long ago of a paint that
provided
RF shielding. On a more refined basis, there was some kind
of
material suitable for walls that had embedded antennas. You
cut
them for a particular frequency range, and they provided
very good
shielding in that range.
There is clearly a demand for this kind of thing. New
technologies
are making a hash of the old (sometimes not so old!) rules.
Two
examples:
- The day of open access to the Internet from businesses is
long
is long gone in most places. All kinds of concerns feed
into this; a big part is concern about liability when
employees access "inappropriate" sites. This
will all
seem a bit silly when the penetration of high-speed
wireless Internet access reaches reasonable levels.
- Insider trading rules have placed all kinds of
interesting
restrictions on how trading firms do business. In
particular, every phone message in and out of
"sensitive" areas is recorded, as is all email.
But cell phones, text messaging, and so on bypass
all that. I gather some firms are responding by
requiring that employees use only company-provided
cell phones. (Whether those calls get recorded is
another question.) How well they'll be able to
maintain such policies, as cell phones morph into
multi-function personal devices, is an open question.
With all this going on, the desire to just finesse the whole
problem
by physically blocking signals is certainly only going to
grow.
Interesting times.
-- Jerry
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