Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Four year jail sentence for webcam hacker

A 47 year old computer technician has been sentenced to four years in jail after being found guilty of using malware to gain control of webcams and to take pictures of the webcam's owners without their knowledge or consent.

The Cypriot man, who has not been named, used a Trojan program to control a 17 year old's webcam and take illicit pictures of her. He then attempted to blackmail the victim, saying he would make the pictures public unless she posed naked for him in front of her webcam. The victim, whose machine became infected after she opened an email attachment, responded to the blackmail demands by going to the local police.

The man was initially arrested in 2005, the same year in which two Spanish men were arrested in separate incidents for similar crimes. One of them, a computer science student, was ordered to pay 3,000 euros compensation to his victim, and a 1,000 euro fine.
Source:The Register

International cyber crime group charged

International cyber crime group charged

Eleven people, including three U.S. citizens, have been indicted by the U.S. Department of Justice on charges relating to identity theft and hacking. The suspects were allegedly involved in the theft of more than 40 million debit and credit card accounts in the last three years, including the high-profile case in which the retail giant TJX claimed that over 46.5 million credit cards had been stolen.

U.S. Attorney General Michael Mukasey commented that the group "used sophisticated computer hacking techniques, breaching security systems and installing programs that gathered enormous qunatities of personal financial data, which they then allegedly sold to others or used themselves." They identified vulnerable commercial networks and collected credit card numbers, PIN numbers and other account data using network sniffers. Some of the information was then sold on via servers in Eastern Europe and the United States.

Albert Gonzalez, one of the defendants, has been charged with computer fraud, wire fraud, access device fraud, aggravated identity theft and conspiracy. Two other Miami men, Christopher Scott and Damon Patrick Toey were also charged. The remaining members of the group (one of whom is only known by an online pseudonym), from countries which include Estonia, Ukraine, the People's Republic of China and Belarus, have been indicted for running and international distribution ring for stolen debit and credit card accounts. If Gonzalez is convicted, he could be sentenced to life in jail.

Mukasey characterized the case as "the single largest and most complex identity theft case ever charged in this country." He also commented that the outcome "shows that, with the cooperation of our law enforcement partners around the world, we can identify, charge and apprehend even the most sophisticated international computer hackers".

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