A 15-year-old teenager has been arrested in Northern Ireland by law enforcement over their alleged role in the TalkTalk hack. In a statement released late Monday, the UK Metropolitan Police force said the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) and detectives from the Metropolitan Police Cyber Crime Unit (MPCCU) executed a search warrant and arrested a 15-year-old boy in County Antrim, Northern Ireland. . The police force says the teenager has been arrested on suspicion of Computer Misuse Act offences, namely, in connection with the cyberattack launched against UK telecoms firm TalkTalk and the subsequent theft of data belonging to millions of customers. . The police force says the teenager has been arrested on suspicion of Computer Misuse Act offences, n. 15-year-old, teenager, arrested, northern, ireland, enforcement, their, alleged. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
An unnamed London teenager has been charged with a series of criminal offences following a series of denial-of-service attacks against internet exchanges and the Spamhaus anti-spam service last year.. The 17-year-old male from London was charged on Friday and faces computer misuse, fraud and money-laundering offences at a hearing in London's Camberwell Green Youth Court today. The teenager was arrested in April 2013 after a series of distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks which led to worldwide disruption of internet exchanges and services. Officers from the National Crime Agency seized a number of electronic devices at the time of his arrest. The link for this article located at The Register UK is no longer available. . A teenager from London is confronted with grave allegations after orchestrating significant DDoS assaults that have severely impacted anti-spam and online service operations.. DDoS Attacks, Cybercrime Trends, Computer Misuse Laws, Internet Security, Young Offenders. . Alex
British police Thursday arrested a suspected member of the TeaMp0isoN hacktivist group. The unnamed 17-year old boy was arrested in the north of England on charges of violating the country's Computer Misuse Act 1990, which is the law in Britain typically used to charge people who are suspected of hacking offenses. . "The suspect, who is believed to use the online 'nic' 'MLT', is allegedly a member of and spokesperson for TeaMp0isoN ('TeamPoison')--a group which has claimed responsibility for more than 1,400 offences including denial of service and network intrusions where personal and private information has been illegally extracted from victims in the U.K. and around the world," read a statement released by London's Metropolitan Police Service. It said that the suspect had been tracked down by the force's Police Central eCrime Unit (PCeU), which serves as a cyber-crime investigation service for England, Wales, and Northern Ireland. The link for this article located at Information Week is no longer available. . A presumed affiliate of the hacking group TeaMp0isoN apprehended for cyber offenses under the Computer Misuse Act, igniting alarms about digital crime.. hacktivism, cyber crime, TeamPoison, data breach. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
There had been concern that Britain's Computer Misuse Act, written in the days before the World Wide Web, allowed denial of service attacks to fall through a loophole. These are attacks in which a web or email server is deliberately flooded with information to the point of collapse. The 1990 legislation described an offence of doing anything with criminal intent "which causes an unauthorised modification of the contents of any computer"; the question was whether that covered denial of service attacks. When a court cleared teenager David Lennon in November 2005 on charges of sending five million emails to his former employer . The link for this article located at Out-Law.com is no longer available. . The link for this article located at Out-Law.com is no longer available.. there, concern, britain's, computer, misuse, written, world. . Benjamin D. Thomas
A 20-year-old man has been arrested in England in the theft of the proprietary software blueprints used by Cisco Systems' networking equipment, police and the company confirmed. . . .. A 20-year-old man has been arrested in England in the theft of the proprietary software blueprints used by Cisco Systems' networking equipment, police and the company confirmed. The man, who was not identified and has not yet been formally charged, was arrested Sept. 3 in connection with the theft made public in May. He has since been released on bail, and the investigation is continuing, Alan Crockford, a Scotland Yard spokesman, said Friday. The man was arrested on suspicion of violating the Computer Misuse Act of 1990, Crockford said. Other details of the investigation and arrest were not immediately available. About 800 megabytes of the software blueprint, or source code, for Cisco's Internetwork Operating System appeared on a Russian Web site in May. It was quickly removed at Cisco's request. The company said the theft was not the result of a software or service vulnerability. Cisco confirmed at the time that the FBI was investigating the theft. The link for this article located at The Associated Press is no longer available. . A 20-year-old man has been arrested in England in the theft of the proprietary software blueprints u. 20-year-old, arrested, england, theft, proprietary, software, blueprints. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A British teenager allegedly brought down the Internet systems of a major US port while attempting to extract revenge on a fellow IRC user, a court heard today.. . .. A British teenager allegedly brought down the Internet systems of a major US port while attempting to extract revenge on a fellow IRC user, a court heard today. Aaron Caffrey, 19, allegedly slowed systems at the port of Houston in Texas to a crawl as the result of an attack actually aimed at a fellow chat-room user, called Bokkie. Bokkie's anti-American remarks days after the 9/11 terrorist attacks annoyed the British teenager so much that he allegedly sought to take out her Net connection using an attack tool he had created. Caffrey, of Saftesbury, Dorset, pleaded not guilty to the single charge of unauthorised modifications of a computer contrary to Section 3 of the Computer Misuse Act 1990 at the start of his trial today. . A young UK resident reportedly interfered with online networks at an American harbor by employing illicit software as an act of vengeance.. Teen Hacker, Cybersecurity Incident, Port Cyber Attack, Computer Crime. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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