Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
Crime

Retrieving a Stolen Laptop By IP Address Alone? 765

CorporalKlinger writes "My vehicle was recently burglarized while parked in a university parking lot in a midwestern state. My new Dell laptop was stolen from the car, along with several other items. I have no idea who might have done this, and the police say that without any idea of a suspect, the best they can do is enter the serial number from my laptop in a national stolen goods database in case it is ever pawned or recovered in another investigation. I had Thunderbird set up on the laptop, configured to check my Gmail through IMAP. Luckily, Gmail logs and displays the last 6 or 7 IP addresses that have logged into your account. I immediately stopped using that email account, cleared it out, and left the password unchanged — creating my own honeypot in case the criminal loaded Thunderbird on my laptop. Sure enough, last week Gmail reported 4 accesses via IMAP from the same IP address in a state just to the east of mine. I know that this must be the criminal who took my property, since I've disabled IMAP access to the account on all of my own computers. The municipal police say they can't intervene in the case since university police have jurisdiction over crimes that take place on their land. The university police department — about 10 officers and 2 detectives — don't even know what an IP address is. I even contacted the local FBI office and they said they're 'not interested' in the case despite it now crossing state lines. Am I chasing my own tail here? How can I get someone to pay attention to the fact that all the police need to do is file some RIAA-style paperwork to find the name associated with this IP address and knock on the right door to nab a criminal and recover my property? How can I get my laptop back — and more importantly — stop this criminal in his tracks?"

Comment Insufficient Funds (Score 1) 497

Oh yeah, this is a great idea. (tic) Let's tell the computer inept to not change their passwords. Crackers around the world rejoice.

Now, once you break into the person's PC and steal their password, you can come back in a month and access their accounts without having to crack anything. Because their passwords will be the same! Not to mention the same password for every blasted thing they use.

"I don't know why $1,000.00 is being transferred out of my account every month. I had malware removed from my PC over 2 months ago... This shouldn't keep happening because the crooks only use the password once at the time of the break in and don't wait to use it again."

Yup, a criminal will only try to take funds from a breached account once. They won't try again next month because they have better things to do.

Slashdot Top Deals

Maternity pay? Now every Tom, Dick and Harry will get pregnant. -- Malcolm Smith

Working...