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Data centre looted in multimillion pound overnight heist7 Dec 2007 14:18 Bogus bobbies raid King's Cross siteConvincing police officersBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 7th December 2007 14:45 GMT
I assume that the robbers also tasered everyone and maybe executed a few people with multiple shots to the head - to make their impersonation of police officers more convincingly realistic. ban the policeBy oliver Stieber
Posted Friday 7th December 2007 14:55 GMT
If we didn't have any police then this kind of incident wouldn't happen in the first place. And if you do ever meet a real police office ask them for ID, it keeps them baffled until you can make a clean get away Empty data centreBy neil
Posted Friday 7th December 2007 15:01 GMT
Is a data centre with no data in it just a fancy name for a spares cupboard ? RE: Convincing police officersBy Rob
Posted Friday 7th December 2007 15:07 GMT
You mean rather than trying to convince them by wondering around doing naff all and employing others to the job for them but with different job titles. Which is just as well otherwise no kit would have been nicked and you wouldn't have a cool heist story :) Nah...By Nick Miles
Posted Friday 7th December 2007 15:08 GMT
Are we sure they were dressed as coppers and not as strippers? mustn't have know too much about IT then...By andy rock
Posted Friday 7th December 2007 15:15 GMT
...otherwise they'd have gone straight for the SAN-looking thing; the data's worth a hell of a lot more, albeit a shitload harder to shift. still, i'm sure they'll have plenty of time to reflect upon their 'error' while sipping pinacoladas on some far away beach. Is it just meBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 7th December 2007 15:23 GMT
But isn't going to the trouble of dressing up as police officers, to break into a data center of an investment bank a little risky just to steal stuff they could have got from many other less protected data centers across the UK A little hard to swallow. This all sounds a little familiar...By TrixyB
Posted Friday 7th December 2007 15:25 GMT
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/11/02/chicaco_datacenter_breaches/ Does anyone think so? FOR SALE:By Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 7th December 2007 15:26 GMT
Assorted servers and sundry items, slightly 'used'. ironyBy simon
Posted Friday 7th December 2007 16:10 GMT
has anyone noticed the ad running on this page... ' my data is safe, is yours' ' my network is safe, is yours' - well it made me laugh... coat acquired... door pending Did they have a quick poke about....By Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 7th December 2007 16:59 GMT
....for a couple of cd's? Mafia PHBBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Friday 7th December 2007 18:40 GMT
It's the usual story; rather than steal the right kit the first time around, the boss went for the cheap stuff. I told him it would need replacing in a year's time.... http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/11/01/level3_robbery/ http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/10/20/easynet_brick_lane_robbery/ http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/10/23/vodafone_network_outage/ I actually...By Anonymous Coward
Posted Saturday 8th December 2007 00:03 GMT
...work in tech support for a company (not JP Morgan) who has several racks hosted at UK5 and this is the first I've heard of it. Fortunately none of our servers have vanished, but there was a cooling system failure (not the first time it's happened either) on Sunday which led to most of our servers getting powered off. Lots of knackered disks and unhappy customers to deal with; just what you need first thing on a Monday. So that's why...By An ominous cow herd
Posted Saturday 8th December 2007 09:51 GMT
...we lost connectivity to Euronext Liffe Financials.... no wonder nobody knew what was going on! no data was taken?By john doe
Posted Saturday 8th December 2007 14:30 GMT
yeah, right. Did they scrub the data before removing the hardware? It's insured no doubtBy Michael
Posted Saturday 8th December 2007 18:11 GMT
£2million pounds worth of stuff? So, the thieves will be wondering where the other million pounds worth of stuff they're supposed to have taken is. They didn't take any data?By Simon Neill
Posted Saturday 8th December 2007 19:24 GMT
What, they take the server, ditch the hard drives? Perhaps all they took was switches and network cables. oh, I know! they came in with a wireless AP and stole £2m worth of bandwidth! coat, door, pub, pint. Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Theft--Same MOBy Steve Keller
Posted Sunday 9th December 2007 06:23 GMT
In March of 1990 the largest art heist in US history occurred in Boston at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum when two men dressed in Boston police uniforms came to the door and asked to be let in to deal with college students running through the interior courtyard. This was a common event since the museum was located across the street from a college, but this time it was not true. Once inside the fake cops tied up the two guards, robbed the museum, took the CCTV system tapes of the event, and left. The case remains unsolved. Museum employees everywhere now know to verify the identity of police before letting them in by call the police dispatcher unless they called for them personally for a known issue. Physical security should be part of every data center employee's training and this should include access control procedures. Steve Keller Museum Security Consultant www.stevekeller.com furthermore...By Slaine
Posted Monday 10th December 2007 10:01 GMT
... All data centre employees work behind secure bullet-proof counters and should be aware of the fact that it is not possible for police to enter a data centre without a valid search warrant. Did no-one at the data centre question this breach of their own security? Their first action should have been to hit the alarm bells and would thus call the REAL police who, presumably would then drop their donuts and be there within the week. Such professionalism, such dedication to duty, such is my coat, my hat. The period for commenting on this story has finished |
Breaking Hardware News
San Francisco City Council regained access to its own computer network today after Mayor Gavin Newsom convinced network administrator Terry Childs to give them the passwords.
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