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From: St. Clair, James (JStClair@vredenburg.com)
Date: Mon Jan 21 2002 - 10:03:49 CST
Lest we forget going UNDER the fence too. This is obviously a little tricky
with Electrical but can be done..
Jim St.Clair
Critical Infrastructure Protection
Vredenburg
(703) 412-4611
-----Original Message-----
From: Kurt Seifried [mailto:bugtraq@seifried.org]
Sent: Thursday, January 17, 2002 3:15 PM
To: nslookup@hushmail.com; peter.kunz@eycom.ch
Cc: cisspstudy@securityfocus.com
Subject: Re: Regs. on DR
>I believe it's 25 miles, ensuring that the backup is outside the blast
>radiuas of a tactical nuclear explosion. Remember, many of the first CISSPs
>are/were military, and thus military guidelines had a major influence
>especially on phyiscal security.
>
>Anyone care to answer the question on what the quickest way of getting past
>a fence a) plain b) barbed wire c) electrical is? :-)
Large heavy blanket/carpet. German green protestors went into nuclear power
plants that way a lot during protests (it's amazingly fast too). Another
technique was to skydive in (you can carry a pretty heavy payload and hit
the target accurately if you've had enough practice, which adrenaline
junkies tend to do). Another way would be to buy/rent a cherry picker truck
and simply have it deposit you on the other side or jump.
>cu
>-pete
Kurt Seifried, kurt@seifried.org
A15B BEE5 B391 B9AD B0EF
AEB0 AD63 0B4E AD56 E574
http://www.seifried.org/security/
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