Attacking Criminal Networks On the Internet
Hugh Pickens writes "Computer Scientists at Carnegie Mellon University are developing techniques to analyze and disrupt black markets on the internet, where criminals sell viruses, stolen data, and attack services estimated to total more than $37 million for the seven-month period they studied. To stem the flow of stolen credit cards and identity data, researchers have proposed two technical approaches to reducing the number of successful market transactions. One approach to disrupting the network is a slander attack where an attacker eliminates the verified status of a buyer or seller through false defamation. Another approach undercuts the cyber-crooks' network by creating a deceptive sales environment. 'Just like you need to verify that individuals are honest on E-bay, online criminals need to verify that they are dealing with "honest" criminals,' says Jason Franklin, one of the researchers."
Syndicate
Pax,
Kilgore Trout
Why not just implement violence support in ipv7? Who needs to undercut them, when you can uppercut (to the point of Toasty)?
Help mcgruff by spreading lies and rumors in an attempt to get the criminals mad at each other? It's like spreading a rumor in prison that some inmate is an undercover cop.
I wonder if anyone is going to get killed over the rumors spread by this anti e-crime technique?
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
So it looks like their plan is to infiltrate the sites used by these people, and discredit them? The only way to be able to discredit them is to get in contact with them somehow or visit a site they visit regularly. If we can find such a site...why don't we just find out whose using it and arrest them? Is this some new take on crime, that instead of arresting criminals we should discredit them? What's the plan?
There are two kinds of fool One says 'This is old therefore good' Another says 'This is new therefore better'- Dean Ing
You see two auctions, one for a kewl expensive collectable car. They look identical in the search page.
One of them has a very low buy-it-now listing, and a gmail address to contact to be a 'qualified' bidder.
Which one of them is fishing for your eBay creds? I see these all of the time; I collect and restore specific models of classic cars, and I see one of these almost every week. If you alert eBay through LiveChat, they'll usually take them down. But if you have report an auction through their mind-numbing 100 questions forms method, you'll never get a fraudulent auction done because you'll explode before you get to the end of forms-- none of which says--> HEY, THIS IS AN OBVIOUS FRAUD!
You can discredit sellers, but sellers have options to restore their dignity if they want to do this-- although it's tough. PayPal can also interecede, as can buyer credit sources. Resources, except in the complaints department, are tilted towards buyers. But that doesn't mean that there are loads of phish attempts. You find them in amusing places, like when I tried to surf for an Apple notebook, and there were a hundred auctions for the same machine-- if you bought the story about getting it shipped from Italy.
---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
You guys have both missed the real criminals ....
http://www.gop.org/
http://www.democrats.org/
of which the other two organizations you mention are wholly owned subsidiaries of these two, as is the other legislative and judicial branch are, along with most of the smaller regional syndicates.
Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
I've never really understood why there's this belief that criminals have trouble being honest. Often, a criminal is only such because society labels them that way and thus dishonest. But in reality, many of them are very nice people performing honest business transactions (unregulated at that!) for their clients. Many drug dealers, prostitutes, pirates, hackers, etc are very honest people in the sense they aren't scamming their customers. They will provide great value to them in fact.
Supporters of the free market can look to the very successful black market as an example of unregulated trade working well. Often in the black market, as this article eludes to, your reputation is everything. So there is no benefit in ripping someone off.
I've worked with many "honest", good people in my black market transactions.
"If you are a dreamer, a wisher, a liar, A hope-er, a pray-er, a magic bean buyer
They're probably trying to retrain the spam filters, in preparation for their next volley...