On the tiny Mediterranean island of Malta, two Italian hackers have been searching for bugs . The hackers, Luigi Auriemma, 32, and Donato Ferrante, 28, sell technical details of such vulnerabilities to countries that want to break into the computer systems of foreign adversaries. The two will not reveal the clients of their company, ReVuln, but big buyers of services like theirs include the National Security Agency The link for this article located at NY Times is no longer available. . The hackers, Luigi Auriemma, 32, and Donato Ferrante, 28, sell technical details of such vulnerabili. mediterranean, island, malta, italian, hackers, searching. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
"Hackers aren't looking for fame anymore," says Yuval Ben-Itzhak, CTO of Israeli security firm Finjan. Unlike in earlier years, their fondest hope is no longer that their PC-crashing code prompts headlines and TV news coverage around the globe. Instead, "Now they go and sell their vulnerabilities and spyware apps for money," Ben-Itzhak tells eSecurity Planet. He says hackers often solicit bids from various buyers of known vulnerabilities; security holes that reveal users' financial information can command top dollar.
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