During the Cold War, we witnessed how military advances drove private sector - especially in aviation. Today. The recent hacking spree by Lulzsec has helped make hacktivism a household term. The Lulzsec team leveraged the methods and technologies used by private hackers to steal data and sell it on the black market. To understand how Lulzsec could thrive requires an understanding of how criminal hacking operates. The Digital Age has created a huge, global black market for data. Today, mature online exchanges exist that resemble eBay in structure, only their focus is selling personal and corporate data of all kinds. For example, credit cards are put up for sale in this hacker forum: The link for this article located at SecurityPark is no longer available. . The rise of Anonymous has illustrated the power of online activism, highlighting an expanding demand for compromised information.. Lulzsec Awareness, Cybercrime Trends, Data Security Risks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The source code of an older version of "Kaspersky Internet Security" has been circulated on the internet. The code was created in late 2007 and was probably stolen in early 2008. Names contained in the sources indicate that the stolen code was probably a beta version of the 2008 software package . According to a Russian language report by CNews (Google translation), the code was copied by a disgruntled ex-employee. The thief has reportedly been trying to sell the code on the black market for some time, and Kaspersky says that the code archive already appeared in various private forums last November. The thief has reportedly already been sentenced to three years imprisonment with a probation period of three years. The link for this article located at H Security is no longer available. . Kaspersky's codebase exposed, igniting worries over cybersecurity protocols and data safeguarding strategies.. Kaspersky Code Leak,Cybersecurity Risks,Data Theft Incident,Internet Security Threats. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Thirty-eight defendants from across the United States have been charged with participating in a multimillion-dollar black market travel agent ring that used the stolen identities of thousands of victims to purchase airline tickets for customers.. "What began as a local law enforcement investigation ultimately exposed an extensive nationwide black market for airline tickets," said Beth Phillips, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Missouri. "Six federal indictments allege that 38 defendants used stolen credit and debit card information from thousands of identity theft victims to purchase tickets, which they sold to their customers at a steep discount," Phillips explained. "These separate criminal conspiracies resulted in an estimated total loss of more than $20 million to numerous domestic airline companies, financial institutions, other merchants, and cardholders." Conspirators used several strategies to obtain the credit and debit card information of identity theft victims, according to the federal indictments. In some cases, conspirators allegedly purchased stolen information from unindicted co-conspirators in Bangladesh, Vietnam, and elsewhere. Some of the defendants allegedly stole customer information at hotels, a bank, and a customer call center where defendants were employed. The link for this article located at Dark Reading is no longer available. . A federal grand jury has charged 38 individuals in a scheme exploiting stolen identities for a multimillion-dollar travel fraud operation, revealing serious concerns in the industry. Black Market, Airline Fraud, Identity Theft, Credit Card Fraud, Legal Indictments. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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