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Scott Schober

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Nationality
  
American

Occupation
  
Business executive


Title
  
CEO and president

Name
  
Scott Schober


Employer
  
Berkeley Varitronics Systems

Alma mater
  
Kean University, New York University

Back to school security tips with cyber security expert scott schober


Scott Schober is an American wireless cybersecurity expert, the CEO and president of Berkeley Varitronics Systems.

Contents

How can we avoid id theft cyber security expert scott schober on good morning america


Education

Schober graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree in Computer Science from Kean University in 1992, after which he attended graduate studies in telecommunications at New York University.

Berkeley Varitronics Systems

Schober has been the CEO and president of Berkeley Varitronics Systems since 2000. One product is used to help teachers and professors detect cell phones used for cheating on exams. Others are microwave-based devices used by the US military. BVS devices can also be used to root out or stop corporate espionage. Fortune Magazine wrote of the company that its partners included Abbott Labs, NASA and the Secret Service. In 2015, he discussed the drone tracking technology his company was developing with Newsweek magazine.

Media

Schober has been interviewed in the news media as an expert in online security. Examples of these interviews include an October 2013 Bloomberg News panel discussing the fall of The Silk Road, including its effects on the stability of bitcoins and the ability for site users to remain anonymous. He has also appeared on Arise News to discuss issues including the problem of corporate espionage. He has stated that the trade secrets and intellectual property of companies, both large and small, are at risk. Schober has also discussed the international scope of the problem, and both technology and non-tech methods of preventing espionage, such as non-disclosure agreements, instituting background checks for all new employees or searching social media sites for information before hiring someone.

On CTV News, he has discussed the role of government in forcing Internet companies to divulge the personal information of its users. In an interview on Blaze TV, he discussed the methodology used by the NSA to access the email messages of American citizens as well as foreigners in order to extract national security information. On Fox News Network, he discussed potential future government proposals for tracking drivers with the intent to levy a tax based on the amount of miles driven by individual cars. He has also discussed the security of government computers from hackers, particularly during software upgrades or other government computer system maintenance. Other subjects he has discussed in television news segments include the hacking of the computer systems of companies like Twitter and The New York Times.

In September 2013 Schober was featured in the CBC television documentary Faking the Grade, regarding hi-tech devices to catch cheaters and spy on illegal cellphone use. In the media, he has also discussed the collection of consumer data by the government via consumer products such as videogames. In 2015 Schober discussed the use of cell-phone trackers and other surveillance technology by police officers in instances where a court order may not be required.

Books

In 2016 Schober released his self-published book Hacked Again – It Can Happen to Anyone Even a Cybersecurity Expert, following his experience being robbed by cyber-thieves twice in the years preceding. The book covers what cybercrime is and how it tends to affect small businesses, breaking up the subject matter into various aspects of the crime. Forbes magazine states that the topics include, "What is a hacker?; What motivates hackers?; Where do hackers hang out (online)?; and how can hackers be detected of lurking around websites where they don’t belong?" Other reviews have stated that the perspective is original, due to Schober's profession as a cybersecurity expert who himself was defrauded. The story of Schober's company being hacked had previously been covered in Forbes in August 2015.

As of June 2016, Worldcat shows that no copy of the book is held in any American library.

References

Scott Schober Wikipedia