°µĶų±¬ĮĻapp News
Local Company Stops Hacking, Tracking
By
Scott Craig
The growing concern about personal information and privacy in the digital age has led a company based in Santa Barbara to develop products protecting consumers. , founded by °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp alumnus ā08, manufactures faraday bags, tents and lockers that block radio waves, including cell phone signals.
āA lot of people don't want their movements always logged or their information shared between their device and every wireless access point they pass,ā Judy says.
After graduating from °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp, he began working in security technology, primarily airport passenger and baggage screening, at a company based in China. He then started his own business in digital forensics focusing on phone and criminal forensics.
While in China, he learned how its government collects data on everyone, including journalists, to gain access to their locations and activities. āWeāve joined with Google, so they send our phone bags to journalists operating in countries where they may be tracked on their devices and located, compromising their human rights,ā Judy says.
Modern vehicles with keyless entry and push-to-start technology are also vulnerable to a key-fob relay attack. āIf you hang your keys on a wall in your house, cheap, readily available devices can go on the other side of the wall outside, grab that signal and boost it back to the vehicle where someone else can open it,ā he says. Mission Darkness sells faraday bags for key fobs to consumers.
Products that shield radio frequency assist law enforcement officials when they confiscate laptops and cell phones as evidence. āThey want to block signals so nobody can remotely wipe the evidence on the device, allowing them to keep the device charged and live,ā he says. āTo maintain the chain of custody with digital forensics, data canāt enter the device after the capture or seizure.ā
A charged device allows law enforcement to use a tool such as GrayKey to crack the password and gain access to its contents.
The Navyās special operations forces recently purchased a round of Mission Darkness Cybercylent faraday tents, portable shielding rooms (6āx6āx7ā) that create a secure environment.
Judy continues to work with fellow °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp alums on other ventures, including Jon Rogstad ā05, with whom he co-founded One Page Inventory that manages ecommerce supply. He and Alec Avedissian ā08 co-founded Rareform, which repurposes vinyl billboards into bags and other accessories.
Judy came to °µĶų±¬ĮĻapp with a curious mind and an entrepreneurial heart, and he credits the richness of his education and many of the connections heās made for his success.
He recalls being a pioneer in duplicating CDs and DVDs on campus for clients such as Santa Barbara indie band Gardens & Villa and theater professor John Blondell during his days as a student. āDrummer Levi Hayden ā07 came to me and said, āHey, I heard you can duplicate some CDs? Our band needs 300 so we can sell them and give them out.ā Using equipment in my dorm room, mostly computer towers, I could pop one in and duplicate a bunch of them. I also had a printer that could print on the surface.ā
His CD-making assistant in 2006, Amanda Lyon Benenati ā08, now serves as vice president of marketing at MOS Equipment. āSheās been an incredible soldier through the years,ā Judy says. āShe's my right-hand person.ā