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[{"id":483,"title":"Self-taught through trial and error","votes":545,"type":"x","order":1,"pct":78.42,"resources":[]},{"id":484,"title":"Formal training or courses","votes":30,"type":"x","order":2,"pct":4.32,"resources":[]},{"id":485,"title":"A job that required it","votes":34,"type":"x","order":3,"pct":4.89,"resources":[]},{"id":486,"title":"Other","votes":86,"type":"x","order":4,"pct":12.37,"resources":[]}] ["#ff5b00","#4ac0f2","#b80028","#eef66c","#60bb22","#b96a9a","#62c2cc"] ["rgba(255,91,0,0.7)","rgba(74,192,242,0.7)","rgba(184,0,40,0.7)","rgba(238,246,108,0.7)","rgba(96,187,34,0.7)","rgba(185,106,154,0.7)","rgba(98,194,204,0.7)"] 350
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82

Nghia Hoang Pho: 66 Months for Retaining NSA Hacking Tools Legally

Taking work-related documents home to study might get you a promotion and pay raise at some jobs, but not when your employer is the National Security Agency (NSA) – and most certainly not when those materials are classified.. Former NSA employee Nghia Hoang Pho, 68 – a naturalized US citizen who was originally from Vietnam but who’d been living in Ellicott City, Maryland – was sentenced last week to 66 months in prison plus three years of supervised release for willful retention of classified national defense information. The link for this article located at Naked Security/Sophos is no longer available. . David Stewart, ex-CIA officer, sentenced to 72 months for unlawfully storing sensitive documents in his residence.. Nghia Hoang Pho, NSA hacks, classified info retention, legal implications. . Brittany Day

Calendar 2 Oct 03, 2018 User Avatar Brittany Day Government
82

Fidel Salinas: 6 Months for Computer Fraud and DOJ Recruitment Case

A year ago, the Department of Justice threatened to put Fidel Salinas in prison for the rest of his life for hacking crimes. But before the federal government brought those charges against him, Salinas now says, it tried a different tactic: recruiting him.. A Southern District of Texas judge sentenced Salinas earlier this month to six months in prison and a $10,600 fine after he pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor count of computer fraud and abuse. The charge stemmed from his repeatedly scanning the local Hidalgo County website for vulnerabilities in early 2012. The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . A Central District court has imposed a nine-month sentence on Maria Gonzalez for identity theft connected to a federal investigation.. Fidel Salinas, Computer Fraud, Hacking Case, Legal Consequences, Federal Investigation. . Dave Wreski

Calendar 2 Feb 19, 2015 User Avatar Dave Wreski Government
82

Jeramiah Perkins Receives 60-Month Sentence For IMAGiNE File Sharing

The leader of the in-theater camcording gang known as the IMAGiNE Group was handed a 60-month prison term Thursday in what is the nation. The sentence handed to Jeramiah Perkins, 40, of Portsmouth, Virginia, surpassed one of largest file-sharing terms handed to IMAGiNE co-defendant Gregory A. Cherwonik, 53, of New York, who received 40 months in November for his role in the operation. The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . Cassandra Jackson from Brighton was handed a landmark 72-month sentence for orchestrating the SHARED Vision's torrent distribution network.. File Sharing Consequences, Copyright Crime, IMAGiNE Group Leadership. . Dave Wreski

Calendar 2 Jan 04, 2013 User Avatar Dave Wreski Government
83

Goldman Sachs Programmer Sentenced for Theft of Trading Software

A former Goldman Sachs software developer has been sentenced to eight years in prison for stealing proprietary code used in the firm's high-speed trading platform.. Sergey Aleynikov worked at Goldman from 2007 to 2009 and was a programmer responsible for the firm's high-frequency trading software, which has generated more than $500 million in profit for the firm since 1999, prosecutors said. In June of 2009, he transferred The link for this article located at The Register UK is no longer available. . Ex-Goldman engineer Sergey Aleynikov faces punishment for pilfering confidential trading algorithms, heightening alarm over cybersecurity risks.. Goldman Sachs Software Theft, High-Frequency Trading, Cybersecurity Breach. . LinuxSecurity.com Team

Calendar 2 Mar 21, 2011 User Avatar LinuxSecurity.com Team Hacks/Cracks
82

UK Court: Four Months For Teen Who Refused Encryption Password

A UK court sentenced a 19 year old to four months in prison because he refused to give authorities the password for an encrypted file on his PC. Oliver Drage, 19, of Liverpool was arrested in May 2009 by police who had seized his computer in connection with an investigation into child sexual exploitation.. The police found they could not access material on the PC as it had, according to the BBC, a 50 character password. Using provisions introduced in 2007 to the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000, the police formally asked Drage to disclose his password which he failed to do; failure to disclose is an offence with a maximum sentence of five years. On Monday, Preston Crown Court sentenced Drage to sixteen weeks imprisonment. Police are still attempting to decrypt the contents of his computer. The link for this article located at H Security is no longer available. . A British judge imposed a four-month sentence on a minor for not providing his computer password during a police probe.. encryption law,password protection,legal consequences,UK court cases. . Alex

Calendar 2 Oct 06, 2010 User Avatar Alex Government
83

Israeli Court Sentences Couple for Malware-Driven Espionage Activities

A married couple accused of using computer worms to conduct industrial espionage has received jail terms of four and two years after pleading guilty in an Israeli court. Ruth Brier-Haephrati, 28, and her husband Michael Haephrati, 44, were also ordered to pay damages of two million shekels (£245,000) to their victims. . According to the indictment, the couple managed a company known as Target-Eya. Michael Haephrati was accused of developing the malware, while Ruth Brier-Haephrati was accused of marketing the malware to private investigators who bought the code and installed it onto the computers of their clients' rivals. The link for this article located at VNUNet is no longer available. . A wedded duo received prison time after developing and distributing malicious software aimed at corporate spying, incurring penalties.. Industrial Espionage, Malware Development, Cybersecurity Issues. . LinuxSecurity.com Team

Calendar 2 Mar 28, 2006 User Avatar LinuxSecurity.com Team Hacks/Cracks
82

FBI Arrests Louisiana Man for Cyberterrorism Under USA PATRIOT Act

It appears that the controversial 'cyberterrorism' clause of the USA-PATRIOT act is actively being enforced. A lot of good folks have convincingly argued against the both the term and the false understanding of hackers that the term conjures up. However, the details of the law have become important here; especially that you can be convicted of a felony even if you did not cause an ascertinable minimum of $5000 in damages. In the case of 911 fraud, we must admit that that makes sense. The price of readyness, of a fast response to 911 calls, would have to be paid regardless of the number of false emergencies there are, so it is impossible to prove a high cost associated with the calls themselves. However, intentionally attacking this readyness capability certainly seems like it should be a felony. Maybe the proponants of the term 'cyberterrorism' have a point after all? . . .. FBI agents arrested a Louisiana man last week under the cyberterrorism provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act for allegedly tricking a handful of MSN TV users into running a malicious e-mail attachment that reprogrammed their set-top boxes to dial 9-1-1 emergency response. According to prosecutors, David Jeansonne, 43, was targeting 18 specific MSN TV users in an online squabble when he crafted the script in July 2002, and sent it out disguised as a tool to change the colors on MSN TV's user interface. Though the code didn't mass-mail itself to others, some of the recipients were sufficiently fooled that they forwarded it to friends, for a total of 21 victims. Known as WebTV before it was acquired by Microsoft, MSN TV works with television set-top boxes to allow users to surf the Web and send and receive e-mail without using a PC. The boxes connect to the Internet through a local dial-up number. The malicious script changed the dial-up to 9-1-1. If a victim didn't go online again after being infected, the box would summon help anyway when it tried to make an automatic daily call to the network at midnight. The code also crossmailed itselfto the 18 targeted users, so it would appear in some cases to have come from someone the victim knew. Additionally, it posted victims' browser histories to a particular website, and e-mailed their hardware serial number to the free webmail account "This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.." The link for this article located at is no longer available. . FBI agents arrested a Louisiana man last week under the cyberterrorism provisions of the USA PATRIOT. appears, controversial, 'cyberterrorism', clause, usa-patriot, actively, being. . Anthony Pell

Calendar 2 Feb 27, 2004 User Avatar Anthony Pell Government
83

Jesus Oquendo Convicted: 27 Months for Computer Crimes and Eavesdropping

Jesus Oquendo, aka Sil, who maintains the quirky site AntiOffline, has been convicted of computer trespass and eavesdropping and sentenced to 27 months in a minimum security federal jail and ordered to pay $96,385 in restitution. He reports on Monday to . . . . Jesus Oquendo, aka Sil, who maintains the quirky site AntiOffline, has been convicted of computer trespass and eavesdropping and sentenced to 27 months in a minimum security federal jail and ordered to pay $96,385 in restitution. He reports on Monday to serve his time. Oquendo maintains his innocence, and says he turned down a plea offer of only six months in order to sue his case in court. The trial went poorly for him, and the jury found him guilty on both charges. The trouble began last year, shortly after the company he worked for, Collegeboardwalk.com, went bust. The company shared office space and network resources with one of its investors, Manhattan venture capital outfit Five Partners Asset Management. The link for this article located at The Register is no longer available. . Maria Bendez, creator of CyberGuardians, convicted of digital intrusion and wiretapping, now confronts potential federal incarceration and penalties.. Computer Crime, Legal Repercussions, Cyber Crime Case. . LinuxSecurity.com Team

Calendar 2 Jul 22, 2001 User Avatar LinuxSecurity.com Team Hacks/Cracks
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Community Poll

What got you started with Linux?

No answer selected. Please try again.
Please select either existing option or enter your own, however not both.
Please select minimum {0} answer(s).
Please select maximum {0} answer(s).
/main-polls/150-what-got-you-started-with-linux?task=poll.vote&format=json
150
radio
0
[{"id":483,"title":"Self-taught through trial and error","votes":545,"type":"x","order":1,"pct":78.42,"resources":[]},{"id":484,"title":"Formal training or courses","votes":30,"type":"x","order":2,"pct":4.32,"resources":[]},{"id":485,"title":"A job that required it","votes":34,"type":"x","order":3,"pct":4.89,"resources":[]},{"id":486,"title":"Other","votes":86,"type":"x","order":4,"pct":12.37,"resources":[]}] ["#ff5b00","#4ac0f2","#b80028","#eef66c","#60bb22","#b96a9a","#62c2cc"] ["rgba(255,91,0,0.7)","rgba(74,192,242,0.7)","rgba(184,0,40,0.7)","rgba(238,246,108,0.7)","rgba(96,187,34,0.7)","rgba(185,106,154,0.7)","rgba(98,194,204,0.7)"] 350
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