thebunker.net — "The Bunker" is situated in England. It is an impregnable fortress 30 meters below ground. It has three meter think concrete walls, steel doors weighing over two tons, 24-hour watch, guard dogs and CCTV. It offers protection from attacks including crackers, terrorists, electro-magnetic pulse, electronic eavesdropping, HERF weapons and solar flares
Mar 2, 2006 View in Crawl 4
chris_kelvieMar 2, 2006
Dang double click. However, look at this:We calculate the monthly service charge at the current per Gbyte rate which is £3.50 / GByte.$7 a gigabyte!<a class="user" href="http://freewebsms.org">http://freewebsms.org</a>
abdulmueidMar 2, 2006
I will wait for a little earthquake to destroy the bunker...
badfyshMar 2, 2006
One of the guys involved in this is a hacker called Adam Laurie, who famously discovered bluesnarfing amongst other things:<a class="user" href="http://www.bbcworld.com/content/clickonline_archive_15_2004.asp?pageid=666&co_pageid=3">http://www.bbcworld.com/content/clickonline_archive_15_2004.asp?pageid=666&co_pageid=3</a>
kmanMar 2, 2006
"HERF weapons and solar flares..."But does it protect against NERF weapons? Those little buggers can get in your way if you're not careful.
itdefpatMar 3, 2006
ULTIMATE protection (We don't need no stinkin SSL!) - ultimately covers all 7 layers (i.e ISO model) - phyical protections out the wazoo, personnel protections, access controls at multiple levels, reduntant network/transport paths. Everthing one needs. I guess that the owner would have co-location controls on upper layer - apps and such, maybe even DNS .
ica__Mar 3, 2006
Is this Semantec's old bunker or do they still have theirs? I know they have/used to have an underground bunker somewhere in England.... could be the same one.
adamthebastardMar 4, 2006
What I want to know is, will they send someone down to destroy your data if you request it? If for some reason I believe someone I don't want getting to my data could be on their way to attempt to take it, I want my facility to call me up and ask for authorisation to burn my disks.That's data security.
knfruitbatFeb 12, 2008
Nice idea, shame in the UK that companies have to collect certain data for consumers to buy certain electrical goods, then just store that data anywhere providing it is cheap. Same goes for the government and public sector, using data back-ups in the US which have totally different laws to those in the UK. Don't think they want to bring in strict laws on data protection because they would be the first ones to be breaking them. If you are in the UK please sign petition. <a class="user" href="http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/datachoice/">http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/datachoice/</a>Thanks