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You are here: Home arrow Resourcesarrow News from the Outside Worldarrow Hacking Back: Cyber Counterterrorism
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Author Topic: Hacking Back: Cyber Counterterrorism  (Read 3636 times)
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don
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« on: November 08, 2005, 01:30:11 PM »

From InformationWeek Posted by Larry Greenemeier on Nov 4, 2005 at 06:36 PM

The recent arrest and 17-count indictment against 20-year-old accused hacker and botmaster Jeanson James Ancheta for both using and selling the tools to attack a number of networks, including some within the Defense Department, should be taken as a shot across the bow by anyone who reads this. Ancheta is accused of being part of a new breed of criminal hacker: not just in it for the fame--sure, he's getting his 15 minutes, although it could be more like 50 years--but rather after money. According to the charges against him, Ancheta even managed to collect nearly $60,000 by creating, spreading, and selling bots to the highest bidders. By all accounts, Ancheta is smart and motivated, and there was a market for his black-market guerrilla hacking tactics and tools. How do you stop a smart, motivated attacker from making your life miserable? Read carefully.

To catch a thief, or in this case a cyberterrorist, you have to think like one. IT professionals have been conditioned to think defensively, draping their networks with sensor-studded barbed wire and using firewalls and intrusion-prevention systems to lock down doors and windows around the perimeter. But there's an emerging school of thought that says only a more proactive approach to security can prepare companies for the unexpected.

For full story:
http://www.informationweek.com/blog/main/archives/2005/11/hacking_back_cy.html

Don
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