One of those "Oh no" moments
Someone was asking me about gadgets, and went off looking for something and turned up a page at Gadgets.co.uk innocently in a corner is something which you'd expect to find in Q's lab in a James Bond movie, but not in the "Amuse your friends by plugging into their PC" aisle. A key logger.
KeyShark is a small external device, looking like and [sic] adapter plugged into keyboard socket
"Installation takes just seconds, and the KeyShark starts to record automatically."
"With enough capacity to store half a million characters (key presses), it can quietly record the average computer user for many months and still have memory to spare."
I knew these things existed, but it came as a shock to find they're this freely available. At £49 each you can see a whole new generation of fraudsters buying a gross of them, and running round all the local cybercafes.
Comments
Anonymous
January 01, 2003
To make matters worse, many of the devices can "phone home" by emailing the results to whoever you configure - hence you can leave such devices hidden away behind machines in less well run establishments and not even bother having to returnAnonymous
January 01, 2003
The comment has been removedAnonymous
January 01, 2003
Not that I'm aware of. This is transparent to the OS, and I didn't think standard PC keyboards don't have the abilty to encypt. Possibly bluetooth ones can ...Anonymous
October 12, 2007
Although I'm a right by saying Vista has a solution for this issue by having communications between input deives such as keyboards encrypted or something to that effect? I'm pretty sure I heard that at some event I was at several months ago.....or I could be dreaming it all up.