Did a Houston man accused of breaking into Galleria-area hotels use a device that targets a security flaw present in millions of hotel rooms worldwide? . Matthew Allen Cook, 27, was arrested in October after investigators linked him to break-ins of at least three Houston hotels between Sept. 7 and Sept. 24. He used a "portable card scanner" to easily gain access to the rooms, according to court records. The link for this article located at Chron is no longer available. . Matthew Allen Cook, 27, was arrested in October after investigators linked him to break-ins of at le. houston, accused, breaking, galleria-area, hotels, device, targets, security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A known hack of a popular hotel keycard reader was allegedly employed in the burglary of a woman's hotel room in Texas.. The hack, which was detailed at a security conference in July, was allegedly used in September to break in to the Houston Hyatt hotel room of Janet Wolf, a Dell IT services consultant, who reported the theft of her laptop. Lacking any sign the lock had been picked, suspicion immediately fell upon the maid service. However, hotel management soon determined that none of the maids' keys had been used to open the room at the time of the theft. The link for this article located at CNET is no longer available. . The hack, which was detailed at a security conference in July, was allegedly used in September to br. known, popular, hotel, keycard, reader, allegedly, employed, burglary, woman's. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
In a caper eerily similar to the the theft of $200,000 worth of AT&T Broadband equipment in 2000, high-tech thieves raided 26 outdoor amplifier sites in Cooper City, causing as many as 14,000 Comcast customers to lose cable service for up to two hours. . . .. In a caper eerily similar to the the theft of $200,000 worth of AT&T Broadband equipment in 2000, high-tech thieves raided 26 outdoor amplifier sites in Cooper City, causing as many as 14,000 Comcast customers to lose cable service for up to two hours. 'Numerous complaints' between 2 and 5 a.m. Aug. 11 brought technicians to Cooper City in emergency mode. Comcast technician Juan Vasquez, who examined five Rock Creek theft sites, said the thieves were intimately familiar with the equipment. 'Every wire that was severed was cut in a manner that would make it easy to replace. There were no wires damaged,' Vasquez told police. The amplifiers, which strengthen the signals that allow subscribers to receive telephone, television and Internet service on a single line, were valued at $2,500 each, according to Michael Tamas, Comcast Communications South Florida regional manager of security, Tamas said repair costs, including overtime for technicians and loss of service to customers, raised the price of replacing amplifiers to $3,000 each and cost Comcast $78,000. The link for this article located at miami.com is no longer available. . A sophisticated cyberheist impacted 16,200 Verizon users, marking a notorious incident that echoes a similar scheme from years ago.. high-tech Crime,Cable Theft,Cable Service Disruption. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.