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british man accused of ‘biggest hack ever’

Forums Life british man accused of ‘biggest hack ever’

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  • Military ‘hacker’ freed on bail

    A British man arrested for allegedly carrying out the “biggest military computer hack of all time” has been released on bail by magistrates.
    Gary McKinnon, accused of hacking into 53 US military and Nasa computers in 2001 and 2002, appeared before Bow Street magistrates in London.

    The 39-year-old, of Wood Green, north London, will be back in court for an extradition hearing on 27 July.

    His lawyer said he would contest extradition to the US “vigorously”.

    She told reporters: “Of particular concern to him is the treatment of other British nationals under the American judicial system which inspires little confidence. “We believe that as a British national, he should be tried here in our courts by a British jury and not in the US.”

    Mr McKinnon, an unemployed computer systems administrator, is known on the internet as “Solo”.

    He is accused of hacking into computer networks operated by Nasa, the US Army, US Navy, Department of Defence and the US Air Force.

    One of the networks belonged to the Pentagon.

    The US estimates the costs of tracking and correcting the problems he allegedly caused were around $1m (£570,000).

    If he is extradited and found guilty, Mr McKinnon faces a long sentence in the US.

    The Briton was indicted in 2002 by a federal grand jury on eight counts of computer-related crimes in 14 different states.

    It claimed that he hacked into an army computer at Fort Myer, Virginia, obtained administrator privileges and transmitted codes, information and commands.

    Unauthorised access

    He is accused of then deleting around 1,300 user accounts.

    The indictment alleged Mr McKinnon also deleted “critical system files” on the computer, copied a file containing usernames and encrypted passwords for the computer and installed tools to gain unauthorised access to other computers.

    At the time of the indictment Paul McNulty, the US Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, said: “Mr McKinnon is charged with the biggest military computer hack of all time.”

    Mr McKinnon’s solicitor, Karen Todner, estimates he could face a maximum 70-year jail sentence if convicted in the US.

    She says he does not deny infiltrating US systems but says his motivation was to try to prove the existence of UFOs and to expose security failures.

    “he does not deny infiltrating US systems but says his motivation was to try to prove the existence of UFOs and to expose security failures.”

    oops.

    not a great defence when you’re looking at a 70 stretch :sick:

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/4071708.stm

    if he just wanted to prove security holes, why trash kernels and user directories? thats bound to get you in shit, and most IT people know nowadays that the days of the “robin hood / white hat hacker” are long gone, they will just get nicked and treated like common criminals rather than being offered consultancy jobs.

    it appears he was just a bored hacker rather than a cyber-Bin Laden; but his activities apparently caused a lot of collateral damage such as knocking out computers in libraries and universities (which are often soft targets, and ethically questionable IMO). He also attacked some private companies and caused them a financial loss.

    OK I haven’t got a lot of sympathy for the pentagon, but NASA do non military stuff as well like civilian air traffic control safety work, and the system disruption fucks up other peoples projects and careers.

    In the USA, particularly without trade unions you could get laid off or lose several days time (==money) off a contract because of an external disruption like this, or have to work overtime to make up for lost time which you would rather spend with your family…

    .there would have been a knock on effect to other IT professionals…

    according to the register the crimes carry a max 5 year penalty rather than 70 years….

    I think he should be nicked but not extradited – or even if he is his sentence could be a light one; perhaps doing unpaid (but supervised) work in rough inner city schools and colleges (either in the UK or USA) to teach kids how to work computers and protect them from worms and viruses!

    General Lighting wrote:
    I think he should be nicked but not extradited – or even if he is his sentence could be a light one; perhaps doing unpaid (but supervised) work in rough inner city schools and colleges (either in the UK or USA) to teach kids how to work computers and protect them from worms and viruses!

    deffo, hacking uni’s and libraries is just crap. hacking air traffic sounds dangerous. tbh, if you play with fire you’ll get burned, if i hacked the pentagon, i’d be damn sure they couldnt track me.

    its just a shame he didnt have more imagination and cause some genuine distress to the US military machine. just confusing them all, causing years of difficulties would have been a good one. locking down all weapons would have been favorite.

    as for extradition, sending people to countries who maim, torture and kill their prisoners doesnt sound like a good idea to me. so he’ll prolly get extradited.

    General Lighting wrote:
    according to the register the crimes carry a max 5 year penalty rather than 70 years….

    5 years

    each :crazy_fre

    globalloon wrote:
    5 years

    each :crazy_fre

    thats dark.

    The differences in jail time for stuff like this between the UK & US is sick. Ive had a chat with an officer from the High Tech Crime Unit in scotland yard once and he told me the same regarding a ring of UK & US trojan programmers. The guys in the UK will probably get a slapped wrist if its a first offence, their US mates will go down for a long time. Apparently the US view these crimes as a threat to national security and punish them with far longer jail time as GL says.

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Forums Life british man accused of ‘biggest hack ever’