US Bot Herder Admits Infecting 250K Machines
AceCaseOR writes "In Los Angeles criminal court, security consultant John Schiefer, 26, has admitted infecting the systems of his clients with viruses to form a botnet containing a maximum of 250,000 systems. Schiefer used his zombies to steal users' PayPal usernames and passwords to make unauthorized purchases, as well as to install adware on their computers without their consent. Schiefer agreed to plead guilty to four felony charges of accessing protected computers to commit fraud, disclosing illegally intercepted electronic communications, wire fraud, and bank fraud. He will be sentenced Dec. 3 and faces up to 60 years in prison and a fine of $1.75 million."
Kevin Smith on Prince
Well, from what I know what happens, the Prosecution gives a sentencing offer and the defendant will agree to plead guilty in order to accept the sentence. Either that or I watched too much Law and Order.
You cant appeal a guilty plea.
It says the dude is facing 60 years.. i dont think you can turn 60 years into 30 months in ANY scenario.
This poo is cold.
Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
Zagreus sits inside your head, Zagreus lives among the dead, Zagreus sees you in your bed and eats you in your sleep.
from the story:....Schiefer said he and his friends spread the bot programs mainly over AOL Instant Messenger (AIM). By using malicious "spreader" programs such as Niteaim and AIM Exploiter, Schiefer and his co-conspirators spammed out messages inviting recipients to click on a link. Anyone who took the bait had a "Trojan horse" program downloaded to their machine, an invader that then tried to fetch the malicious bot program." Read more at this link here.
...because you never know who you're dealing with.
This blog, Security Fix, in the washington post has additional info based on an "exclusive interview",
http://blog.washingtonpost.com/securityfix/2007/11/security_pro_admits_to_hijacki.html?nav=rss_blog
From the article: The poor guy saw the light in early January 2006.
"Ever since then, I've been more trying to create a positive thing and trying to prevent crap like this happening," he said. "I kind of saw the error of my ways and decided I'd had enough."
Holy crap! 3G has the IT security contract over here in Afghanistan (where I am stationed). This is so not good.