Almost 100 Arrested In Worldwide Swoop On Blackshades Malware 87
MattSparkes (950531) writes "Law enforcement around the world has teamed-up to arrest 97 for buying/using Blackshades malware, which can remotely seize control of a victim's computer, access documents, record keystrokes and even activate their webcam to take surreptitious pictures and video. It is also able to encrypt files in order to extract a ransom for their release. Blackshades RAT is a commercial product costing less than $200 which was marketed as a tool to test network security. However, it is widely used by hackers and was even said by the Electronic Frontier Foundation to have been used against Syrian activists by the government in 2012."
it is actually illegal (Score:4, Interesting)
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If you read the article.. then could you point to the exact article that states that selling the software was illegal?
All I'm reading is raids at people who used the software.
Though I wouldn't blame them for going after the authors/sellers, given that it's got a template "we encrypted your files, send payment here for decryption key" letter included. That rather sways things well away from the "it's just a network security testing tool" suggestion.
Re:it is actually illegal (Score:5, Informative)
During the course of a worldwide investigation, creators, sellers and users of BlackShades malware were targeted by judicial and law enforcement authorities in 16 different countries.
http://www.eurojust.europa.eu/... [europa.eu]
So they didn't go after people that bought it. They went after the people that wrote it, sold it or used it. If you bought it but didn't use it, they aren't going after you... yet. I suspect that what happened here was the authors put a backdoor into their backdoor software... which the users should have expected... lol. When they got raided, either law enforcement found it or they made a deal with the authors.
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Ha, there it is - thanks for the follow-up!
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An online friend of mine in Belgium has been arrested in the last week. We do not know exactly why he was arrested, but it appears that this is the reason. We know he purchased this piece of software, and we are fairly certain he did not use it..I think he wanted to pull it apart.
Very frightening stuff indeed.
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Xzibit named as mastermind behind scheme (Score:2)
I suspect that what happened here was the authors put a backdoor into their backdoor software...
Yo dawg, I herd you like backdoors, so we put a backdoor in your backdoor so you can.... er, sod it, you can probably guess the rest yourselves. :-/
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I did read the article and was wondering the same thing.
The National Crime Agency (NCA) also said in a statement that it is aware of more people in the UK who bought the software but are yet to use it. It is working to warn them that "they are now known to the agency" and that "any movement into criminality will result in further action".
Re:it is actually illegal (Score:5, Insightful)
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It's more like like guns. OK for defense (IE Pen testing) not ok for random drive-bys (Hacking)...
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to buy and sell a piece of software? what one does with it is obviously a different story, but I didnt think there was anything illegal against buying and selling a piece of software.
If it teaches a lesson to fucking imbeciles who think it is fun hacking into innocent people's computers, I'm all for them getting locked up. The lesson is that computers are "real world". That unknown people owning these computers are not "slaves" as they like to call them, but real people.
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What if you made an app for iOS that, when activated, jammed all the cell signals within a 500' radius?[...] If I take my SD card out, is the phone legal now?
Nope, if you have an SD card to take out, you're using a KIRF iPhone and it was illegal as soon as it was imported to the US, and always will be. For a slightly different reason though.
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They're illegal to market, sell or use:
http://transition.fcc.gov/eb/jammerenforcement/jamfaq.pdf
But you're right, if you own one as long as you don't use it it seems ok to possess.
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NSA (Score:3, Funny)
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When are they going to arrest the NSA, GCHQ, or the other nation-state adversaries doing this exact same thing?
Do we need to catch them and report them to the police first?
People in glass houses shouldn't throw stones.
Also, don't build glass houses. Or throw stones.
Today's Best Slashvertisement? (Score:4, Insightful)
How many of you thought, "Hey, only $200...hmmmm?"
Be honest.
I wonder what this particular Slashvertisement cost to buy?
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Your tinfoil hat's width would stop an ICBM.
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I thought, "I bet I can google this and get it for free." I was right.
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Hard enough to trust malware that you paid for, how trustworthy do you think a "free" copy that you managed to find will be?
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How do you "trust" any malware?
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You trust it on a virtual machine, on a honey pot host, in a virtual network, that is disconnected from any other system...
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Windows is not the only OS out there (Score:3)
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Re:Windows is not the only OS out there (Score:5, Funny)
Anyone who you would want to stalk, read their dirty emails, and see naked via a spycam is using Windows. Or possibly a Mac. I REALLY don't think you want to see the average Linux user naked and/or blackmail them for dirty pictures.
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I REALLY don't think you want to see the average Linux user naked and/or blackmail them for dirty pictures.
One of the few examples where 'security through obscurity' does work.
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Don't you know that on Slashdot, you can attack Mac OS X, iOS, Linux and Android, but you can't say a word about the holy gaming-OS?
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No. Please write "MSWindows computers". Microsoft does not own the trademark on windows in English speaking countries. It is a common word in descriptive use and is therefore not eligible for trademark protection.
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As a teen, I remember actually getting some bozo on IRC to install BO on his PC for me. Social engineering is so fun. Dem were the days.
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As a teen, I remember actually getting some bozo on IRC to install BO on his PC for me. Social engineering is so fun. Dem were the days.
That's called "dehumanizing the victim". It wasn't a human being, it was a bozo, so it was alright.
What? (Score:2)
Only 100 - that can't be. NSA is not that understaffed!
Any different? (Score:2)
How is this any different from something like GoToMyPc.COM or Join.Me ????
Should I be worried now that I use join.me to invite friends to see what I'm doing, or use it to help friends having trouble?
A piece of software's intended functions should not be viewed as good or bad, it's simply a tool. You can club some one over the head with a monkey wrench and kill them. Does that mean this tool has no legitimate uses?
"Shall the clay say to him that fashioneth it, What makest thou?"
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Elimination competition (Score:2)
raids sponsored by Vupen :)
A hair dresser needs a license to cut hair (Score:1)
Victim's computer malware? (Score:1)
What Operating System does this malware run on, or aren't we allowed to mention Microsoft Windows. ref [scribd.com]