Is Anyone Safe From HP's Spies?
from the just-wondering dept
As HP brings on new lawyers to deal with the expected indictments concerning the HP board spying scandal, it's now coming out that the spying went even further than the board and a whole bunch of reporters. Turns out that at least two employees had their phone records obtained via "pretexting" (which used to be called identity theft). It's also worth noting that Patricia Dunn (who has been choosing her words carefully) says that the spying included "a number of individuals outside the company, including journalists." This would at least suggest that some of the people outside of the company were not journalists -- though no such people have been identified yet. Anyone made up "HP spied on my phone records" t-shirts yet?Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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T-Shirts
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Re: T-Shirts
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Did they not identify one?
Remember an article somewhere (. ?) that the father of one of the journalists was also targeted
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QUIT IT!!
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Re: QUIT IT!!
I dunno, maybe because they were involved with spreading or publishing leaked information...What are you anyway, some kind of HP fanboy?
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Re: QUIT IT!!
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Re: QUIT IT!!
Try switching to decaf.
The point is voluntary disclosure of the spying having gone further than HP's board, further than HP spying on its own employees, and apparently even further than the reporters to whom information was leaked.
It's just too similar to the NSA program: the intended targets are just the first wave. Then they look at who the targets called, then who they called... it's a geometric progression.
Granted, HP doesn't have equipment at the phone switches, but they pursued the same ends: Spy on everyone you suspect, then spy on their associates, then spy on ...
It's not FUD until you take it that way. Before IBM woke up, I worked for a firm which was 70% Sun, 20% HP, and 10% IBM. The IBM salespeople showered us with FUD. We ignored it, and eventually got rid of their equipment.
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As for the topic at hand, I do consider it newsworthy. HP needs to learn that they are not above the law. They can't just tap into people's private lives without consent and expect to get away with it without so much as a slap on the wrist. In my opinion, Ms. Dunn should have been fired on the spot. Whether or not she was acting on her own or under orders from somebody else is beside the point. She broke both ethical and state (or is it federal?) laws, and that requires a punishment of some sort. I don't know about you, but I would be absolutely furious if I found out somebody was pawing through any of my personal records for any reason at all.
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HP = Corporate Espionage
News doesn't exist anymore... it's just another way to advertise something now days.
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The Law
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Re: The Law
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Hey HP! Hire a MAN!
HP, it's time to put a man in charge.
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Re: Hey HP! Hire a MAN!
stupid girls suck!
I'm telling my mom you're mean.
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Pretexting my ass!!
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Sounds Reasonable (?)
That is precisely the justification now used by the Federal Government in all of its NSA spying & warrantless-search activities.
Doesn't HP have the right to 'Self-Defense' ?
What's the problem ?? (;-)
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Are you basing this on the idea that anything it's ok for the government to do, it's ok for a non-elected corporation to do?
Or are you just seizing upon a very loosley similar subject to make a random political snipe?
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Re: Humor check
You might want to check your humor filter.... I think it's broken.
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I am embarrassed
I left HP during the Carly years after being there for a long time as I saw the new regime with Carly was crushing all the life out of it's employees. The merger with Compaq finished it off for me as the authoritarian style of management from Compaq literally squished the empowering style of HP.
My hopes began to grow with the new CEO, Mark Hurd, that HP was coming back to it's roots and I still believe it is.
The board is a left-over from the "old days" of Carly and in my opinion needs to go for the most part and elect ones that are more in alignment with the corporate values.
I am embarrassed that this is happening to HP as I hold some of my fondness memories while I was there.
In the long run, it's a good thing that this happened, it's time to clean house.
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I'm just waiting...
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--George w. Bush
Indianapolis, IN
10/15/2004
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Dude it's an HP
(Just bought a new HP laptop recently, still far better bang for your buck over it's top competitors).
Anyone remember years back when Patricia Dunn was being hailed as the savior for HP when she was brought in to replace Carly Fiorina? Funny how times have changed.
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crap
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Re: crap
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The difference is..
HP clearly broke the law. No one is credibly arguing that HP was OK to do what it did. Dunn has destroyed the company's reputation and put a big black mark on a corporation that was truly making great strides in its PC line, recouping significant market share from its rivals.
The President has legal authority that a CEO just doesn't have. He may have broken the law, but at least he was trying to protect the nation. Dunn was just trying stop a few leaks.
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Random political snipe?
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Heres your T-Shirts
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Re: Heres your T-Shirts
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Can someone call up my bank and gain access to my account? Why is someone allowed to call up my phone provider and get information? Thats the fucking story.
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Re:
Um, did you read the story? The person who called to gather the information posed as the account owner and had the account owner's information (SS#, etc) There was no selling of information involved, they simply gave the information to whom they believed to be the account owner.
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RE: the difference is.
He was comparing was comparing the the moral justification rather than the legal one...
I am sure he is aware there is a difference legally between the two.
The fact that the government is held to a lower moral standard than private corporations is disturbing to me because the moral definition of the government is the standard by which the legal definition is defined.
Before anyone gets up-in-arms...there is a difference between religious moral standard and a moral standard based on reason.
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My d@mn shirt!
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