No Prosecution
No matter what evidence is found. BT gave the alleged thieves implied consent, y'see....
Thieves bagged new networking gear worth tens of thousands of pounds in the early hours of this morning in a raid on BT's Stepney Green exchange - just two weeks after its Mayfair facility was burgled. BT told customers that nine 21CN network cards were lifted at about 3.45am took down three ISPs in the area and left customers …
The second illegal trial?
I think the thieves should write a letter explaining their actions, just like BT had to do. Yes, that would be fair. And before the City of London think about investigating, lets remind them it would be too expensive and require extensive counsel. Better to just leave it alone.
You know I completely misunderstood the line asking about the two being related. I now understand they mean the two break-ins, but I thought they were asking if a party thrown by Madonna next door could have been related in some way. I thought maybe the goodiebags at the party weren't expensive enough for some celebs so they decided to bag themselves some top-of-the-range networking goodies instead.
Up until a couple of years ago I worked in telephone exchanges all over the country.
This kind of theft was quite common. I knew people who were frequently called out to see why an ISP had lost all its connections, only to find the equipment had been pinched.
We were also advised to keep an eye out for suspicious characters when working nights.
Most BT telephone exchanges are inside structures that don't look any more secure than my garden shed. It's hardly surprising that some people have figured that BT's poor security is an opportunity to make a quick buck.
By the way, absolutely love the comment by Mike Crawshaw, implied consent sounds about right! If BT are going to host expensive infrastructure in run down insecure buildings then they might as well just leave the doors open... Similarly Sam's comment about 'no criminal intent' raises a smirk!
I'm going to grab my gardening jacket and head to the telephone exchange next door. Maybe that's where my lawnmower ended up when I last cut the grass after having a couple of pints...
the cards themselves probably have very little resale value and your common thief will not have a clue what to take.
the value is in the chips on the cards. They will be stripped off the cards and sold on in the grey market.
where they are valued at 2M for the cards, they will probably only make about 40k, but that is still a good haul for a quick and easy break in. less risk than breaking into houses and banks...
mines the one stuffed with assorted networking kit...
This high-end stuff is really not my field, but I'm really intrigued as to who the f is in the market for it. Is it being stolen to order and if so by whom? (Yes I know the answer to that could lead to prosecution, but maybe someone can, ahem, point in the general direction).
I mean it's not the same as nicking a nice metallic blue Porsche 911 with few extras (as wot happened to a mate of mine). This was clearly nicked with a customer/market in mind. Probably not a million miles from the middle east (as it happens).
You see, BT don't really have security uppermost on their minds, do they. I mean, Phorm... oh...
yeah, i also think this sounds very much like someone out there (even possibly a large corporation) may be both knobling BT and expanding their 'facilities' at the same time...
.. unless it's just plain ol knobling bt.. why (else) would anyone want that equipment?
since this equipment is far from being common, it's possible that it was never intended to be re-sold or re-used, but just disposed of, to screw BT over. seems to me that BT have been asking for it with their actions which are clearly unethical, and that they've gotten away with it.
corporate karma?
You obviously missed the experiments last week that showed just how much airco power you could save by throwing open the doors in the evening.
Those parts are just given a cooling off to save energy, that's all. They just moved them a bit far away.
I'd rig the lot, but the issue is that it could be an insider job..
Say you agreeded to supply n cards but becuase you now lack credit with your bank, 'cus the banks have all fucked up, you can't supply n but only n-p cards
The obvious soloution steal the cards already deployed, use the insurance money to buy new ones & sell the stolen ones back to BT
Sweet as long as the asset tracking has be subcontracted to the same people supplying the cards
Why steal such specialised equipment? Not easy to make money from selling it as it would be more than coincidence that such equipment is up for sale following the incident - and likely to attract attention from the police.
Who would buy it? Who could feel comfortable basing their business on stolen equipment? Those in the market for such equipment would likely go through authorised resellers for piece of mind surely.
And how anti-social the theft! ISPs, businesses and homes lost service due to the theft.
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This 21CN equipment? Would it by any chance be the same 21CN equipment supplied by Alcatel-Lucent - remember, some months back they bought the stealth data miner better known as Project Realto/Kindsight.
Unless I am a complete innocent I would have thought there would be quite a market for this equipment. A quick re-engineering of the backdoor and then some equipment swapping while no one was looking. If I can think of it, then so can a hacker / malware merchant.
And who would know? One card looks the same as any other card. Those serial numbers are really difficult to read in poor lighting.
Is anyone calling for BT to do a security audit? What about other ISPs that are in the 21CN market - how is their security?
This was in the city, but in the country theves steal the cables. BT also don't bother with poles all the time. Often they just leave them in the grass or strung on the hedges. One of my customers cuts hedges for the council, he says he sometimes cuts through the BT cables.
I don't think they really meant to have committed an offense. They were just testing security at the facility and since BT did not really secure the facility they consented to this act. The police need not investigate this issue as it is far to complicated and we are to dumb to understand the details anyway.
This just goes to show how SECURE their Phorm servers really are. Phuck OFF Phorm
Im also wondering who/where this equipment is going to?
If it IS being stolen for the far east (or somewhere else), how's it being exported/smuggled out of the UK?
Surely the frieght airlines are using extra security for exports going out of UK to check for this equipment? ......and the theives must've been seen on CCTV a few times (not just in London)?