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  1. #61
    DF VIP Member stevo25's Avatar
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    Quote Originally Posted by Realist View Post
    Next on: Monday, 20:30 on BBC One

    Murdoch's TV Pirates

    As Rupert Murdoch faces accusations of law-breaking and corruption at his British tabloid newspapers, Panorama reveals fresh hacking allegations at the heart of News Corporation's pay-TV empire.

    The investigation examines the role of former senior police officers in recruiting people to break the law - in order to bring down Murdoch's commercial rival.


    Credits:
    Reporter Vivian White
    Producer: Stephen Scott.

    Broadcast: Mon 12 Mar 2012

    Link HERE

    Laters
    apparently in HD as well LOL

  2. #62
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    LOL

  3. #63
    DF VIP Member FR15K's Avatar
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    Lets hope its not encrypted FFS
    Raptor is a :censored and a bit of a :banned :censored :censored :censored

    5 Thanks given to FR15K

    Ashley (6th March 2012),  BFG (20th March 2012),  Detector (6th March 2012),  Mobileman (6th March 2012),  Realist (6th March 2012)  


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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    Hi
    show has been put back at least one week maybe2 so cancel your record plans
    LS
    Dear Lord, please grant me the ability to punch people in the face over Standard TCP/IP

    Thanks to Lou_smorals

    blaggard (8th March 2012)  


  5. #65
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    Quote Originally Posted by Lou_smorals View Post
    Hi
    show has been put back at least one week maybe2 so cancel your record plans
    LS
    Bugger, probably have programs about the Armed Forces to do in light of the recent loss. . . .
    If at first you don't succeed.....redefine success. . . .


  6. #66
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    on sky still showing as on tonight at 8:30 on BBC1 ??

  7. #67
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    8:30pm
    Coming Soon

    Panorama :
    Homs: Journey into Hell

    Paul Wood charts the rise and suppression of the uprising in the Syrian city of Homs.
    A wise man once said " "

  8. #68
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    Cant wait to see this...

    Long time ago now so might be remebering wrong but wasnt DR7.com also involved with nDS in "similar" circumstances...
    Like I said.. long time ago lol

  9. #69
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    Taken from DataCave Read HERE


    Tom Mockridge, the former Australian executive tapped to replace Rebekah Brooks as head of News International, the British of arm of Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation, is himself at risk of being caught up in a hacking scandal that unfolded on his watch at Sky Italia.
    Italian prosecutors have told a criminal trial in Sicily that a computer hacker recruited by a former Scotland Yard officer working for News Corporation and paid through News International caused millions of dollars of damage to a rival company that provided services to Italian pay television broadcaster Sky Italia.
    On July 14, the day before Mockridge’s appointment, the News Corp arm at the centre of the Italian scandal, NDS Limited, brought forward plans to float, a move that will distance News from the trial in Sicily.
    The claim involves corporate espionage rather than invasions of privacy and comes as Rupert Murdoch hinted he would not be succeeded by his son James, News International chairman, under whose watch the phone hacking occurred.
    Mockridge reports to James Murdoch.



    Tom Mockridge at a Sky Italia function in 2003. Mockridge was appointed in September 2002 to oversee the merger of two separate Italian pay-TV businesses – Stream SpA and Telepiu (formerly owned by French group Canal Plus) into what became Sky Italia. He had previously run the Foxtel pay television business in Australia.

    Photo: Reuters




    The prosecutors told the court in Sicily that in early 2003 (which was eight months after Mockridge moved to Rome for the launch of Sky Italia), NDS hired Europe’s leading anti-piracy expert, Davide Rossi, as a consultant – and that Rossi used his position to provide protection for the chief hacker, Pasquale Caiazza, and others “in the exclusive interest of the company NDS”.
    Sky Italia used the results from Caiazza’s piracy as the reason to cancel a large multi-year contract with smartcard company Nagra France, and replace it with a lucrative contract with NDS – a decision that Mockridge announced in early 2004, although he had no oversight of NDS.
    Telephone taps conducted by Italian police have revealed that a piracy ring was able to obtain at least 40,000 Nagra France smartcards from the head office of Sky Italia in Milan, which they reprogrammed as pirate cards using Caiazza’s hacking program.
    There was no suggestion that Mockridge was aware of the hacking but the case could raise the question as to how the alleged conduct could have happened on his watch.
    Rossi has vigorously denied the charges against him.
    An NDS spokesman said last month that the move to appoint Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley to float NDS, after a partial sale to private equity group Pemira in 2009 left News with 49 per cent, was not related to the hacking allegations.
    In contrast to the telephone hacking scandal in Britain, which relates to obtaining private information about individuals, the Italian trial has raised court allegations of corporate dirty tricks and theft of intellectual property involving many millions of dollars.
    The criminal trial in Sicily focuses on a 27-month period after Tom Mockridge was appointed in September 2002 to oversee the merger of two separate Italian pay-TV businesses – Stream SpA and Telepiu (formerly owned by French group Canal Plus) into what became Sky Italia.
    The case involves a process called conditional access, by which pay-TV providers such as BSkyB ensure only paying subscribers can watch their programs by issuing customers with a smartcard carrying a microchip, which they insert into their set-top box to unscramble the pay-TV signals.
    It is a highly competitive field. When a smartcard is pirated, it can cost the pay-TV operator hundreds of millions of dollars in lost subscriptions from people watching their programs free of charge, which means there is intense pressure to change to another smartcard provider.
    Pasquale Caiazza, a hacker based near Naples, using the name Linixone, is charged with reprogramming Seca 2 smartcards developed by Nagra France, turning them into pirate cards that provided free access to Sky Italia.
    The reprogrammed pirate cards were then distributed through a piracy ring that police say turned over €30 million ($41.5 million) in sales a year – almost all of it profit.
    This became the reason Mockridge cited for cancelling Nagra France’s contract.
    At the same time, NDS cards were also being targeted by other hackers who are also defendants in the trial in Sicily – leading to the unusual position whereby NDS is named as a victim of the piracy in one part of the case while at the same time, prosecutors quote telephone transcripts that investigators say indicate NDS supported piracy against Nagra France.



    News Corporation chief executive Rupert Murdoch with Rebekah Brooks, the former chief executive of News International. Brooks was forced to resign and was subsequently arrested as part of the News of the World hacking scandal.

    Photo: Reuters



    The case opens a fresh legal front for Rupert Murdoch’s embattled media group, which is already facing at least three separate police investigations in Britain into allegations of telephone hacking, bribing police and computer hacking.
    Eleven journalists and News International executives have been arrested in the UK.
    In the United States, the Federal Bureau of Investigation is examining allegations that News Corp employees hacked into the voicemail of victims of the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on New York.
    The FBI is also said to be examining a series of civil court cases in which News America Marketing paid $US658 million to settle claims of anti-competitive behaviour that included repeatedly hacking into the mainframe computer of a rival company to gain trade secrets.
    The Italian investigation is perhaps the most extensive of these police operations, based on hundreds of telephone taps conducted by the Guardia di Financia, the financial police arm operated by the Italian military more often used to pursue the Mafia, which stumbled upon the hacking when investigating suspected drug dealing in Sicily.
    But the trial, which began in May, is moving at glacial place. Since 2008, The Australian Financial Review has pieced together a picture of the investigation after contacting a range of parties to the case.
    The conditional access business is profitable but highly competitive: in the past decade, NDS had faced four separate lawsuits by competitors claiming damages in excess of $2 billion.
    It’s estimated that NDS has spent upwards of $80 million in legal fees successfully defending these legal actions, where it was alleged that the News Corp arm fostered piracy of its rivals’ technology to win customers away from them, and to reduce the profits and market value of pay-TV businesses that News Corp could later acquire.
    The Italian case is particularly worrisome for News Corp because NDS has worked closely with a string of other News Corp businesses, ranging from Foxtel to HarperCollins, under the close supervision of the office of the chairman at News Corp’s headquarters in New York.



    Chase Carey, now the chief operating Officer of News Corporation, decided to drop a case DirecTV had brought against NDS after News Corp bought DirecTV and Carey was appointed chief executive in 2003. He instead signed NDS up for a new long-term contract.

    Photo: AFP



    Chase Carey, now News Corp’s chief operating officer, was the News executive overseeing NDS at the relevant times in the earlier court cases, when News owned 82 per cent of NDS. Two of the court actions – brought by DirecTV in the US and Canal Plus in France – were dropped after News in effect bought the companies.
    In the case of the US satellite broadcaster DirecTV, Carey made the decision to drop the case against NDS after he was appointed chief executive of DirecTV in 2003 and instead signed NDS up for a new long-term contract.
    NDS has always vigorously denied any involvement in piracy or theft of intellectual property, claiming the cases are a cover-up for weaknesses in its competitors’ technology.
    Its accusers have met with widespread scepticism and disbelief that a major international company would be involved in what is in effect corporate espionage. Such acts seem inconceivable because the damages that security breaches produce can be so huge.
    Mockridge came to Italy with the reputation of a capable and loyal News Corp executive, with close ties to the Murdoch family. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal in October 2002, a month after his arrival in Italy, Mockridge said his biggest challenge was piracy. Both Telepiu and Stream “had been extensively hacked”.
    Mockridge’s comments about piracy were supported by the secretary general of Europe’s chief anti-piracy body, the Association Européenne pour la Protection des Œuvres et Services Cryptés (AEPOC), Davide Rossi. Rossi warned against the evils of piracy, telling the Los Angeles Times, “There is a general attitude that piracy is not a crime, particularly in Italy.”
    It was damaging to pay-TV companies because “when you make a [revenue] forecast and it’s not reached because you have a piracy rate of 35 per cent instead of 10 per cent, it means you’re not reliable”, he said. “Your partners may not be willing to support your other provisions.”
    Rossi was in a unique position to comment: not only was he the author of Italy’s anti-piracy laws, he was also a member of the Committee for Intellectual Property Protection in Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi’s cabinet.
    The solution to the piracy, in Mockridge’s view, was to change both Stream and Telepiu systems to run NDS conditional access cards, which would be deployed to all Sky Italia subscribers within a year, he told the The Wall Street Journal in the October 2002 interview.
    There was one problem. Sky Italia didn’t have the legal right to change smartcard providers. Nagra France, which is part of the Kudelski group in Switzerland, still had years to run on its contract to supply Telepiu customers with its new Seca 2 smartcard.
    So a lot was riding on making sure the new Seca 2 card remained unhacked. But in early 2004, a fresh outburst of piracy in Italy targeted Seca 2. Mockridge cancelled the Nagra France contract, replacing it with NDS.
    While no charges have been brought against NDS or Sky Italia, the prosecution case in the trial in Sicily is that the telephone taps indicate that NDS was behind the hack of Seca 2, although police did not investigate NDS directly. Indeed, as previously noted, because some of the hackers also targeted NDS cards, NDS is named in the case as a victim of the piracy.
    Rossi is accused of providing support and protection to hackers “in the exclusive interest of the company NDS which was operating in a competitive system on the Italian market”. Rossi has strenuously denied the allegations.
    NDS did not respond directly to email questions from the Financial Review this week. A spokesman in London wrote: “We are surprised at the tone of your queries relating to the criminal proceedings currently before the court in Siracusa, Italy. Even a cursory review of the papers will confirm that NDS has been named in this matter as one of the ‘injured parties’.”
    Mockridge did not respond to emails from the Financial Review this week.
    Nagra France and its parent, the Kudelski group, declined to comment.
    Rossi formally signed on as an NDS consultant for the Sky Italia launch on April 17, 2003, when he met with Len Withall, a former Scotland Yard officer who had succeeded former Scotland Yard commander Ray Adams as head of NDS Security in Europe. Rossi had already made contact with the Naples hacker, Pasquale Caiazza, on March 17.
    In a statement posted on the AEPOC site in February 2008 after his arrest, Rossi said that he was not a specialist in technology: “I was talking to this alleged hacker (and to others who have not been raided) trying to understand technical details of piracy in order to check the effectiveness of the legal tools available. This is an essential activity in order to understand how to prevent and properly fight piracy.”
    Rossi was quoted in Italian newspapers as saying that Caiazza, who used the online name Linixone, had assured him he was a family man who did hacking as a hobby.
    In his statement, Rossi said he was “immediately forwarding all the information collected to the Italian anti-piracy private and public bodies I collaborate with”.
    On June 21, 2003, Rossi summoned Caiazza to lunch at San Pietro restaurant in Cetara, a town 45 kilometres south of Naples, for their first meeting in person.
    At some point Caiazza also came in contact with Len Withall, who headed NDS Security in Europe. Telephone intercepts by the police reveal Caiazza discussing expense claims that he had submitted to Withall.
    Forensic analysis of computer hard drives that police later seized from Caiazza’s home found a string of files relating to the hack of Seca 2 which were created on June 21, the day of Caiazza’s meeting in Cetara, and the days and weeks following, obtained from unknown sources.
    Bank statements show that on December 17, 2003, News International in Britain transferred €1000 to Caiazza’s account at UniCredit Banca in Bologna. News International made further payments of €1250 each month to Caiazza’s account through 2004.
    Caiazza had finalised a hack of Seca 2 cards by the end of 2003, and pirate cards began to appear from January 2004.
    In order to begin widespread distribution, the piracy ring needed to obtain original Seca 2 cards that were then reprogrammed to become pirate cards.
    The piracy ring was able to obtain huge numbers of Seca 2 cards – up to 40,000 at a time – from the Sky Italia head office in Milan, apparently without the knowledge of Mockridge or senior Sky Italia management.
    Nagra France brought in millions of a new version of Seca 2 cards to plug the security hole, but Mockridge decided not to use them. Instead, on April 27, 2004, Mockridge cancelled the Seca 2 contract, citing the piracy problem, and signed a new contract with NDS to provide all of Sky Italia’s smartcards.
    The Seca 2 cards were not phased out until the end of 2004, and the piracy continued.
    In July 2004, Nagra France filed a formal complaint to Policia Postale, the branch of the Italian police that handles cyber crime. The complaint identified Caiazza as the chief suspect in the Seca 2 hack.
    But here events took an unexpected turn. That same month, according to an Italian newspaper report, the Guardia di Financia raided the home of a 33-year-old Italian-Australian, Concetto La Rosa, as part of a drug investigation. They found no drugs and no suggestion La Rosa was linked to drugs.
    Instead, they discovered that La Rosa, who was born in Melbourne in 1970, was a hacker known as “Titanic”. Some of Titanic’s online contacts were involved in piracy. La Rosa did not comment to the Financial Review.
    It was the Guardia di Financia’s extensive wire-tapping powers – used more often to target the Mafia – which turned the investigation around. They found links between La Rosa and the Naples hacker, Caiazza, whose house was raided twice in December 2003.
    It turned out that Caiazza was having regular phone conversations with Rossi, the head of AEPOC.
    Rossi had been informed of the Policia Postale piracy investigation that was centred on Caiazza and may have been aware that Caiazza’s phone was being tapped. However, he was not informed that his own phone was tapped as well.
    The hackers’ phone conversations with Rossi and others were laced with references to “Len” and to “Jerusalem”, an apparent reference to Len Withall and to NDS, which is based in Israel.
    While the evidence was indirect, investigators concluded that NDS provided information about the Seca 2 card that allowed Caiazza to hack it.
    But the police investigation did not target Sky Italia or NDS directly, and no allegations have been raised against Withall or Mockridge.
    In one telephone conversation, another hacker told La Rosa that “il Canguro” (“the Kangaroo”, which police understood to be a reference to Rupert Murdoch) wanted to establish the use of his own sole decoder. In the conversations, La Rosa says he believes Sky Italia was responsible for the piracy.
    The charge against Rossi is that while he did not take part directly in the piracy operation, he acted “in the exclusive interest of the company NDS which was operating in a competitive system on the Italian market, by providing Caiazza with materials, money, credit and cover including with the judicial authorities and the police”.
    Police raided the homes of Caiazza and a string of other hackers in December 2003.
    Caiazza made a series of frantic calls to Rossi after the raid, telling Rossi that police had found only two smartcards. Rossi asked him what they had found on his computer, while Caiazza assured him he had erased everything, that Rossi shouldn’t worry.
    There shouldn’t be any links to Rossi, he said, then added, there might be some emails from him. “Ah! the email,” Rossi replied. “Well then, if they find my email . . . you’re operating on behalf of NDS . . . as a consultant of NDS. So who cares?”
    Caiazza told Rossi that he did not do this for business, and that while police might find some hacking files for Seca 2 he had written, he would say he had received it from someone else.
    The police investigation lasted about 18 months, but it was not until February 2008 that prosecutors laid piracy charges against Caiazza, Rossi, a police officer and 23 others.
    In his 2008 public statement Rossi said: “I had telephone and email contacts on a monthly basis with just one of the alleged hackers raided. Certainly I did never encourage him to make any business from piracy or to violate any conditional access system.
    “This man always [assured] me that he was not involved in any organisation and he was not committing any crime.”
    In the past, NDS has notched up an impressive list of legal victories against its accusers. In 2002, it was sued in separate cases by US satellite broadcasters Echostar and DirecTV (which was a client of NDS), French media group Canal Plus, Sogecable in Spain and MEASAT in Malaysia.
    Only one case, by Echostar, went to trial. In 2008, a jury found in Echostar’s favour on three of six charges, but awarded only nominal damages.
    The Italian case went to trial in Siracusa in May this year. But under the Italian court system, the complex case is being heard only one day a month.
    It is in the interests of the 26 defendants to spin proceedings out, because by the middle of next year, many of the charges will be beyond the statute of limitations and the charges may be dropped.
    Meanwhile it remains to be seen what will emerge when the mountain of police phone-tap transcripts is released on the public record.

    3 Thanks given to Realist

    DJ OD (19th March 2012),  macmilm (20th March 2012),  stevo25 (19th March 2012)  


  10. #70
    DF Probation macmilm's Avatar
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    That last photo looks like Keith Lemons dad ...

  11. #71
    DF VIP Member FR15K's Avatar
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    Oh its gonna be well worth watching
    Raptor is a :censored and a bit of a :banned :censored :censored :censored

  12. #72
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    whens it on then now lads?
    A wise man once said " "

  13. #73
    DF VIP Member FR15K's Avatar
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    Monday
    Raptor is a :censored and a bit of a :banned :censored :censored :censored

  14. #74
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    is there anything new going to air apart from what we know?
    A wise man once said " "

  15. #75
    DF VIP Member FR15K's Avatar
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    Lots new, put it this way there may be a sequel needed
    Raptor is a :censored and a bit of a :banned :censored :censored :censored

    Thanks to FR15K

    Detector (21st March 2012)  


  16. #76
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    sweet as, im really looking forward to it now. its about time that smug aussie twat had a bit of his own medicine
    A wise man once said " "

  17. #77
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    You all going to be left in shock put it that way, prepare to re evaluate everything you thought you knew.
    Raptor is a :censored and a bit of a :banned :censored :censored :censored

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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    Hi
    thats what I said in the beginning but was slated for digging up old rubbish???? I personally met with some of the people interviewed only 6 weeks ago in another part of the world lol and also possibly a main one who was never interviewed ever and I guess maybe one or two of you will know who.
    LS
    Dear Lord, please grant me the ability to punch people in the face over Standard TCP/IP

  19. #79
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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    Quote Originally Posted by Lou_smorals View Post
    Hi
    thats what I said in the beginning but was slated for digging up old rubbish????
    Is this in another thread as I have read through this one and can't see it?

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    Default Re: anybody here give interview

    I am not going to say much more than sometimes its better to keep a sleeping bear in the dark before you go in all guns blazing.

    Make of that what you will.
    Raptor is a :censored and a bit of a :banned :censored :censored :censored

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