|
Information Security News
mailing list archives
Exclusive: HP's printer team in espionage drama
From: InfoSec News <isn () c4i org>
Date: Thu, 29 May 2003 04:50:26 -0500 (CDT)
http://www.theregister.com/content/51/30914.html
By Ashlee Vance in San Francisco
Posted: 28/05/2003
Hewlett-Packard's top secret printer labs are under attack from an
audacious rival using the art of deception to gather confidential
information.
A group of engineers working on HP's next-generation network laser
printer have come under siege from a competitor, The Register has
learned. Employees have received calls at work and at home from faux
members of the HP team, asking for details on a new 9500 series
printer code-named Nozomi. HP has fingered the culprit, we are told,
although the company's identity cannot be released at this time.
The calls started to come into HP's Boise, Idaho labs close to one
month ago. The spies would pretend to be supervisors from another part
of HP. They would grill engineers about ink cartridges and Nozomi's
design. Some workers were also called at home with the spy pretending
to take a survey about technology and, yes, ink cartridges.
"They know the projects people are working on and where they live," a
source said. "They pretend to be someone from another office and ask
various questions. They're very smooth in their delivery."
An HP spokeswoman declined to comment for this story.
HP suspects that a competitor has backed the espionage campaign with
close to $1 million in funding. An HP executive flew to Boise to
instruct employees on what to do when the enemy (or the press) calls.
Placards with directions have been placed throughout the well-guarded
labs.
HP has a number of fierce competitors in the printer space, including
Lexmark, Canon, Epson. and new rival Dell.
Corporate espionage is a somewhat common practice in the IT industry.
Oracle admitted to keeping an eye on Microsoft by hiring a lobby
group, IGI, to buy garbage from pro-Microsoft lobbyists.
One of HP's competitors appears to have taken a similar course. HP
dominates the printer market and makes a killing in the process, so it
stands to reason that rivals want to be in the know. In its last
quarter, HP's printing and imaging business generated $918 million in
profits.
-
ISN is currently hosted by Attrition.org
To unsubscribe email majordomo () attrition org with 'unsubscribe isn'
in the BODY of the mail.
By Date
By Thread
Current thread:
- Exclusive: HP's printer team in espionage drama InfoSec News (May 29)
|