Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Crime Microsoft Sony United Kingdom Games

UK Arrest Over Xbox Live and Playstation Network Outages 86

An anonymous reader writes Neowin.net is reporting the arrest of one Vincent Omari, a UK citizen [see also this Daily Mail story from a few days ago mentioning Omari], in the Christmas Day DDoS attacks on Sony's PSN and Microsoft's XBL systems: "In documents sent to Neowin, Vinnie Omari has been accused of 'hacking of the Playstation Network and Xbox Live systems over the Christmas Period'... While this is the first arrest related to the recent service disruptions, it may not be the last... In further conversations with those who are familiar with the investigation and the arrest, Omari believes that the police will not find anything of substance on his computers. His alleged crime is that he helped coordinate the DDOS attack on the service."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

UK Arrest Over Xbox Live and Playstation Network Outages

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward

    doesn't look british

  • Funny (Score:1, Troll)

    by lapm ( 750202 )
    Since when its hacking if you ddos someone? your not penetrating system, just sending it massive amounts of traffic to make it choke...
    • Do you really think the prosecutors, law enforcement agencies and lawyers are going to have a squabble about semantics?

      • Do you really think the prosecutors, law enforcement agencies and lawyers are going to have a squabble about semantics?

        Semantics are generally the only thing that prosecutors, law enforcement and lawyers squabble about.

    • So if I breathe hot choking cigar fumes in your face, from my fat, dirty cigarillo, that's not assault? After all, all I'm doing is sending massive amounts of particulates (traffic) to make you choke...

    • by Dahamma ( 304068 )

      Since it's defined in many national laws as "intentionally causing damages to a computer system". And it's going to be hard to argue it wasn't intentional after they bragged about it so much on Twitter already...

  • by Stan92057 ( 737634 ) on Thursday January 01, 2015 @12:58PM (#48711823)
    My Ideas to help stop this kinda attack.

    Identify as many infected computers as they can and block each and every one of the PCs,cellphone,servers whatever at the ISP level. We all cry we want an open internet but that is impossible if people are allowed to run infected PCs for theses scum criminals to use at will. No more blame game no more OS wars. PC owners have to be more responsible, no PC should be connected to the internet without a firewall and antivirus/malware software period end of story. I sure as hell would want to know if my PC is being used without my knowledge and im betting a few billion of my internet friends think the same as i do. Funny they don't bat an eye to spy on us, to collect all the data they can dig up to make mint for advertising. they know damn well whose PCs are infected and being used as bots.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      ISP's will never do it because it puts the cost burden of support on them

    • by Twinbee ( 767046 )
      If your antivirus software is as bloated McAfee or Norton, then I'll politely decline your offer. Nothing would have me massively slow down my PC for something approaching a placebo.
    • Ah yes the old "lets throw responsibility on the ISP's story". while I agree ISP's need to do more and should be playing an Active role in shutting down some of the more obvious crap (some are), it really is unreasonable to expect them to bear the cost of becoming the internet police unless perhaps you are proposing every internet user should pay a compulsory extra 10% for their ISP to cover this cost?

      • I say ISP because they have the technology, the tools, the money, the time, as apposed to say me who don't have the knowledge,money, time. They will save billions if they clean up the abusers and unsuspecting victims. 200,000,00 drone PCs use alot of bandwidth that's will be a direct savings to all ISPs so ya don't have to worry your stock will remain high as well as your profits. Everyone will win.
    • Most of the big internet companies do something this (try doing some Google searches over Tor for an example). Things get more complicated when you use a CDN because whilst you can block the IP yourself, the CDN keeps sending their traffic to you. You need to either get the CDN to block as well, or inspect the request that came via the CDN to see if it was actually from a blocked IP (which is more expensive to you than an ordinary block).

      The tricky thing about ddos attacks is they they are usually very dist

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The attack - said to be carried out by a group called Lizard Squad, among others - left 160 million users unable to use their consoles,********* including children who had just received them as Christmas presents.********

    hahaha, they had to wang the children angle into this like anyone gives a fuck. if anything, he probably did the fucking mongs a favour by keeping them off the TV for the only hour of their fucking boring ass lives

    cunts

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Can he still be a proper cyberbogeyman?

  • Google is painfully slow over comcast landline but StartPage is fine. Google on my smartphone over the Tmobile network is okay.
    Spigotmc is painfully slow but Slashdot is fine.

    It's like about 10% of the sites are taking over 30 seconds to respond.
    Haven't seen any news about an ongoing DDOS attack on Google or any backbones.

    • by Kaenneth ( 82978 )

      Google used to take 30+ seconds to load for me, switched to Century Link, and now it loads effectively instantly...

      Comcast sucks.

  • How stupid are these people that they keep getting caught? This didn't even sound like the type of braggy, immature morons that usually hack things. It was allegedly a DDOS for hire demonstration from a professional business group style thing.
  • Test Flight (Tales of tomorrow).
    Season 1, episode 10.
    Original air date: 26 October 1951.
    An ambitious, headstrong businessman uses his huge personal fortune to construct a spaceship that will take him to Mars.
    Cast: Lee J. Cobb (Wayne Crowder), Vinton Hayworth (Davis), Cameron Prud`Homme (Marty Peters) and Harry Townes (Wilkins).
    From IMDB.
    Very good story well developed. Great interpretation of Lee J. Cobb.

"Protozoa are small, and bacteria are small, but viruses are smaller than the both put together."

Working...