Things are not as they appear in cyberspace
Remember the 'accidental hero' that stopped one of the largest cyberattacks in history?
Today he got arrested for unrelated cybercrimes.
A British computer expert who helped shut down the WannaCry cyber attack that crippled the NHS has been arrested in the US for his alleged role in an unrelated malware attack.
....
"Marcus Hutchins ... was arrested in the United States on August 2, 2017, in Las Vegas, Nevada, after a grand jury in the Eastern District of Wisconsin returned a six-count indictment against Hutchins for his role in creating and distributing the Kronos banking Trojan," DOJ spokesperson Wyn Hornbuckle said in a statement to The Independent.
Meanwhile, someone actually claimed the $140,000 in ransom payments from the WannaCry attack. No one was arrested.
Speaking of cybercrimes, let's talk about Russian hackers.
The hackers behind the dump of Democratic Party emails in the midst of last year’s presidential race left apparent evidence of their identity — a breadcrumb trail winding from the stolen files back to the Russian government, according to assessments from the U.S. intelligence community. Some of this evidence was there from the beginning, embedded inside the first documents to hit the web, raising a niggling question: Why would diabolically skilled Russian operatives operate so sloppily?
This question has persisted, and last week the White House seized upon it, promulgating the idea that if the Russian government were really behind the attacks, its online agents wouldn’t have left any fingerprints. Russia quickly repeated this claim through its UK embassy.
But a 2011 presentation to the NSA and its foreign partners by Canada’s signals intelligence agency, the Communications Security Establishment, undermines the notion of a foreign hacker so skilled that a victim would never know their identity. The document calls Russian hackers “morons” for routinely compromising the security of a “really well designed” system intended to cover their tracks; for example, the hackers logged into their personal social and email accounts through the same anonymizing system used to attack their targets, comparable to getting an anonymous burner phone for illicit use and then placing calls to your girlfriend, parents, and roommate.
Maybe, just maybe, not all Russian hackers work in the Kremlin?
The article criticizes Trump for his belief that those nasty Russian hackers were brilliant, but fails to mention how the Dems are also stirring up fear of clever Russian hackers.
The problem here is that cybercrime is a HUUGGEEE problem that is being dumbed down so much that the spin totally distracts from the reality of the situation.
It's like trying to have a conversation about the MIC, but only by using metaphors about the Coyote/Roadrunner experiences with Acme's exploding products.
Here's a dose of reality.
“We believe that data is the phenomenon of our time. It is the world’s new natural resource. It is the new basis of competitive advantage, and it is transforming every profession and industry. If all of this is true—even inevitable—then cybercrime, by definition, is the greatest threat to every profession, every industry, every company in the world."
That prophetic commentary was shared in a Forbes post, when some vendor and media forecasts put the cybercrime figure as high as $500 billion annually. Last year, the Microsoft Secure Blog reported that The World Economic Forum estimated the economic cost of cybercrime to be $3 trillion worldwide. That was a six-fold jump in cybercrime damage estimates in just one year.
Cybercrime damage costs are now predicted to reach $6 trillion annually by 2021, according to the latest research conducted by Cybersecurity Ventures
Identify theft alone is growing by 80 per cent a year. Which means it's totally and completely out of control.
50% of small and midsized organisations reported suffering at least one cyber-attack in the last 12 months.
Now you might think that these facts will stir up some sort of response in the media and Washington.
Nope. All we get is Russian hackers employed by the Kremlin hacking our sacred democracy.
When this finally blows up in all of our faces (and it will), the public and the press will be left wondering what happened, and how did Putin do it.
Comments
So, is this how it goes now?
So, is this how it goes now?
Let me see if I've got it right. Either brilliant or moronic, but def EVIL RUSSIAN HACKERS!!1! got the DNC emails, gave them to Seth Rich, who then put at least some of them in a "secure" drop box but then Wikileaks got the password to the drop box, extracted the emails and published them.
Do I have it right?
It would be nice if good guy hackers could use Kronos to drain the bank accounts of oligarchs the world over then transfer the funds to poor people the world over. I know, that's just a nice fantasy...
i like that fantasy.
"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon
@dkmich I love how you think!
I am so tired of the Russians did it narrative
and the Bernie screwed the Dems narrative, and the we can't have single payer because - reasons you wouldn't understand narrative.
It's why I've been turned off on writing anything lately. Our economy is in a crisis and at some point will collapse like 2008 (quite likely much worse), our world is headed for a climate catastrophe, WWIII is a real possibility and no one in the news talks about it, politicians don't talk about it, it's as if anything significant fell into a black hole never to be heard from again.
"You can't just leave those who created the problem in charge of the solution."---Tyree Scott
@Steven D Not watching TV helps a
I don't know whether we'll die quick from nukes or slow from climate change. I feel powerless and like I'm surrounded by people out of their god damned minds.
I couldn't agree more.
I feel like I'm surrounded by crazy idiots, and I want to round them up and dump them in Texas.
"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon
@dkmich We have tons of
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981
Well, if I really should be scared of hackers...
then maybe I shouldn't keep all my government records in an easily deletable electronic form, and instead send memos like they used to?
Maybe I should insist on Hand Counted Ballots.
Maybe I should not keep all my money in an electronic form and instead insist on hard currency or documents?
Maybe they're just full of shit.
I do not pretend I know what I do not know.
Go all cash, all the time.
If anything, it will really throw a wrench in the works. Everyone's works, hackers, the IRS, the big banks and their credit cards, the data miners, and all the alphabet government agencies tracking you.
If only we could get all Americans to switch to a cash existence.
Why, we could make America great again!
Neither Russia nor China is our enemy.
Neither Iran nor Venezuela are threatening America.
Cuba is a dead horse, stop beating it.
@earthling1
And that would be one of the reasons they want to take cash money out of our hands...
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.
I'm one of the ones who agrees
that, assuming the Russian government is the one behind the purported hackers, no, they wouldn't leave a trail of breadcrumbs back to the Russian government that's as wide as the interstate.
Felix Edmundovich? FFS. Do NSA hackers call themselves "J Edgar Hoover?"
Which leads to the following question about cybercrime (of the hacking variety, not the bullying variety):
What about the cybercrimes committed by agencies like the NSA and their private-sector colleagues?
This isn't just me venting my spleen at the security sector, which you all know by now I don't like and don't trust.
It's a question that not only has importance because of the cybercrimes such agencies commit, but because, if we're to believe various whistleblowers, software has "holes" or "back doors" built into it which compromise its security in relation to everyone with a certain level of digital skill, and those back doors are being put in for the convenience of such agencies and related private-sector corporations.
"More for Gore or the son of a drug lord--None of the above, fuck it, cut the cord."
--Zack de la Rocha
"I tell you I'll have nothing to do with the place...The roof of that hall is made of bones."
-- Fiver
https://www.cnet.com/news
https://www.cnet.com/news/microsoft-slams-spy-agencies-for-stockpiling-v...
Please note, in the manner of the Clintons and others with no regard for law, rules or national security, it's stated below that:
Did this also include donors?
Oddly, the modification notice listed below only appeared when I went back to get the title and writer/date info I'd missed copying (edit: and after I'd blued-out the date area then showing, to copy-paste that.) And I'd first tried searching for the article using the copy-pasted stunted portion of the URL showing in the Preview section which, instead of listing anything close to this on a page of options, said it 'couldn't connect to the page'? So I'm guessing that Google's alteration of search results to make 'fake news' harder to find affects other search engines which, I believe I've read, use the Google system as a base? (Please correct me if I'm mistaken?)
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2017/mar/08/wikileaks-vault-7-cia...
And what was already known well before this?
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/sep/05/nsa-gchq-encryption-codes-...
Evidently exploitable by anyone with the know-how and desire to tap such vulnerabilities in virtually everyone's computers.
The spy agencies are obviously destroying national security in an even more damaging manner than are the greed-maddened megalomaniacs infiltrating the US government.
Psychopathy is not a political position, whether labeled 'conservatism', 'centrism' or 'left'.
A tin labeled 'coffee' may be a can of worms or pathology identified by a lack of empathy/willingness to harm others to achieve personal desires.