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Introduction Data theft is one of the biggest security problems many enterprises face today. Companies have lost millions of dollars due to internal employees leaking valuable corporate information to various 3rd parties or competitors. Companies are fighting back to combat these situations with a multitude of surveillance techniques to keep track of what employees are up to. This is where KeyGhost comes into the picture. KeyGhost is a manufacture of hardware keyloggers designed to covertly monitor each and every keystroke made on the target machine.
Keyloggers in general can be a security nightmare for companies and physical hardware keyloggers top this list since unlike software keyloggers they won’t be detected by monitoring software and very hard to identify unless you’re very observant. Hardware keyloggers will capture pretty much anything that is typed on your keyboard, so it has the potential of capturing your PC login details, Bank account logins if you login to your bank account through the PC, emails typed, and confidential documents. Basically you type it, the keylogger will capture it. In the wrong hands a keylogger can be quite detrimental to an organization/person. However from an organization’s perspective these devices can be used for security investigations if you suspect an employee of any wrong doing. (Please note we’re not going to get into a whole legal debate on the use of this device and you will need to seek legal advice before deploying such a device to monitor any person.) These hardware keyloggers can be used as evidence gatherers and probably could be used in a court. Having said that, today we look at KeyGhost’s newest introduction; the TimeDate KeyGhost USB/HUB Keylogger with 2MB of memory. Looking at the KeyGhost USB/HUB Keylogger the main concern anyone will have is its size. One would call it slightly on the bulky side for a device that’s supposed to portray stealth and be discreet. Nevertheless it’s still not a problem for the untrained eye and once it’s installed on the back of the PC its doubtful people would suspect check the back of their desks for a device like this.
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