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Hack a Million Systems and Earn a Job

An anonymous reader writes "It has been a number of years since the fantasy that hackers will be offered a job by those who they hacked was even a potential reality, but this might still be the case in New Zealand. An 18-year-old hacker responsible for writing a number of applications used by an online group called 'the A-Team' that allowed the creation of a million-plus machine botnet and a range of credit card fraud activities to take place, has walked free from court sans conviction despite pleading guilty. And to top it all off, the NZ police force were interested in talking to the hacker about working for them, and 'several computer programming companies' were also chasing him for his skills."

267 comments

  1. Well I always wanted to be an F1 driver... by MagdJTK · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...so I'll be driving everywhere with my foot to the floor, hoping for a drive by 2010!

    1. Re:Well I always wanted to be an F1 driver... by Forge · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Why would you want to be a F1 driver? It's the Rally drivers who get all the hot girls.

      As for the NZ Police trying to employ the best hacker they failed to convict? Freaking Briliant IMHO.

      Sure it will be togh to keep him out of crime and they may have to imprison him at a future date. On the upside, monitor him will be a lot easier when the police own his hardware and network. And all without violating any kind of civil liberties since he is an employee.

      On top of that, Ciber crime, Fraud, Forgery etc.. are crimes of misdirected intellect. It takes a mind at least within the range of a clever criminal to capture him. Making this kid potentially quite useful.

      --
      --= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
    2. Re:Well I always wanted to be an F1 driver... by Walkingshark · · Score: 4, Funny

      Ciber crime

      You mean stealing warmed, spiced apple juice from a dyslexic person?

      --
      The world you experience is only a close approximation of reality.
    3. Re:Well I always wanted to be an F1 driver... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK fool, i'm gonna pop your cap by 2010..

      Promise..

    4. Re:Well I always wanted to be an F1 driver... by Thanshin · · Score: 3, Funny

      Ciber crime

      You mean stealing warmed, spiced apple juice from a dyslexic person?

      No, he meant a weather in some location averaged over some long period of time that has fermented apple juice characteristics.

      He's talking about London.

    5. Re:Well I always wanted to be an F1 driver... by Forge · · Score: 1

      That's it.
      Imagine how clever a thief must be to steal London?

      --
      --= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
  2. Old by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Oh great. I'm twenty and I'm comparitively useless and old. That's so depressing. :(

    1. Re:Old by mrbluze · · Score: 3, Funny

      Oh great. I'm twenty and I'm comparitively useless and old. That's so depressing. :(

      Now you just have to grow your hair long and look depressed and you too can be like him.

      --
      Do it yourself, because no one else will do it yourself. [beta blockade 10-17 Feb]
    2. Re:Old by v1k · · Score: 0, Troll

      And you can't spell either. Just go hang yourself.

  3. haha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This has been on the news for awhile in NZ, the funny thing is the paper the other day said tens of thousands, then another one said hundreds and now it's a million!

    Awesome.

    1. Re:haha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has been on the news for awhile in NZ, the funny thing is the paper the other day said tens of thousands, then another one said hundreds and now it's a million!

      It's six million you insensitive clod!

    2. Re:haha by martin-boundary · · Score: 4, Funny

      Sure, sure, but did any of the papers also happen to mention something about a bj?

    3. Re:haha by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1, Funny

      That's the problem with being a hacker. You can get all kinds of infections into any system you want, but you can't get your perfectly everything-negative virgin cock in any girl's mouth.

    4. Re:haha by neonmonk · · Score: 2, Funny

      As long as it's OVER 9000!!!

    5. Re:haha by hplus · · Score: 5, Funny

      Obviously he hacked the news sites to change the number.

    6. Re:haha by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Why the hell does this only have +2 funny?
      And why is it not "insightful"?
      It's the ultimate trouth we all should agree to.
      Maybe while shedding a tear, but agreeing is inevitable.

    7. Re:haha by Saint+Gerbil · · Score: 1

      Can you get internet access in prison ? Still 999,999 only gets you life not a job.

    8. Re:haha by cpricejones · · Score: 1

      if he were really that good, he would have done all of this during his job interview

    9. Re:haha by hesaigo999ca · · Score: 0, Redundant

      That is too funny!

  4. So, shall we call him mitnick jr? by PC+and+Sony+Fanboy · · Score: 3, Funny

    This is a great step forward for black hats everywhere! And a great step forward for aspiring CS students ... and a step back for mankind. *siigh*

    at least it was 2 forward and one back...

    1. Re:So, shall we call him mitnick jr? by gamanimatron · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This was not a step back for mankind - that happened many years ago. I saw only steps forward or sideways here - that's a pretty hefty fine for a kid, and he'll actually have a chance at doing something that isn't entirely socially destructive now. The alternatives (conviction and incarceration or parole) would just be destructive to him and worse than useless to the state.

      If they jailed every 18-year-old that somehow didn't get a good sense of right and wrong from watching MSM, society would implode overnight. And just jailing some of them won't have any effect on the behavior of the rest.

      Sorry, no solutions here - the problems are beyond my ken.

      --
      cogito ergo dubito
    2. Re:So, shall we call him mitnick jr? by tjscott · · Score: 1

      at least it was 2 forward and one back...

      It's just a jump to the left...

    3. Re:So, shall we call him mitnick jr? by PC+and+Sony+Fanboy · · Score: 1

      ... but, should we allow 18 year olds to make such drastic mistakes without punishment?

      Honestly, I almost got kicked out of school for stealing a keyboard (and I wasn't the one that took it!)

      I'm not suggesting that his life should be ruined, but he's being rewarded. That just ain't right...

    4. Re:So, shall we call him mitnick jr? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bastard. I refuse to type in the next line, but be assured that that damned song will be spinning in my brain for the next half-hour...

    5. Re:So, shall we call him mitnick jr? by xalorous · · Score: 1

      NO fine was mentioned.

      Almost 10k in reparations and 5k in fees. What about the almost 40k he made?

      Fine should be at least 40k.

      --
      TANSTAAFL GIGO Acronyms to live by!
    6. Re:So, shall we call him mitnick jr? by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Simple solution: just think about Gypsies, Tramps and Thieves". Of course, there's a slight problem with that solution ...

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    7. Re:So, shall we call him mitnick jr? by PawNtheSandman · · Score: 1

      at least it was 2 forward and one back...

      That's because opposites attract.

  5. What happened to ethics when hiring? by Joshuah · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This guy has already proven that he will break the law. By working for the police department, he can write the systems for them, then later leave and hack their system. The guy has already been proven that he can't be trusted, so why work with him.

    1. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by mrbluze · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This guy has already proven that he will break the law.

      No he hasn't. He wasn't convicted, so the judge considers that what he did didn't break her interpretation of the law.

      The guy has already been proven that he can't be trusted, so why work with him.

      He hasn't been placed in a position of trust anymore than anyone else, so he has not proven anything. On the contrary, the Judge remarked that he has a phenomenal future ahead of him.

      By working for the police department, he can write the systems for them, then later leave and hack their system.

      Nobody trusts anybody in the police department. That's important and that's how you fight corruption. He will fit in well there.

      --
      Do it yourself, because no one else will do it yourself. [beta blockade 10-17 Feb]
    2. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Darkness404 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Think of people like him as code mercenaries. They go to the highest bidder. Now, he is a person you don't want working against you, so why not hire him? Now, granted you would be stupid to give him the root password of your server, but for security, do you want some guy who has only read about rootkits and trying to protect your system from them, or a guy who writes rootkits. Would you rather have a guy who has read about programming, or say Linus Torvalds? This man is very accomplished and talented as this shows. So it is either hire him and earn loyalty for the term of the contract, or he might just hack you. Which one do you want?

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    3. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by McGiraf · · Score: 1

      "This guy has already proven that he will break the law. "

      That's what made the police interested in hiring him.

    4. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Loyalty? You said it yourself, the highest bidder wins which is not someone you want to hire. After all what happens when some third party pays him more so he sabotages your code?

    5. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Darkness404 · · Score: 1

      Loyalty? You said it yourself, the highest bidder wins which is not someone you want to hire.

      Most of these people honor a contract. And after all, if there is a flaw in the code, they will be the first one that gets blamed. And I highly doubt that third-parties would pay to sabotage code for a police department or business. Very few governments/citizens care about a police department, and other businesses don't want a paper trail leading them to the downfall of a competitor. And other hackers won't think it fun to pay someone to inject a vulnerability.

      --
      Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
    6. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Gewalt · · Score: 1

      Well, if he's capable of erasing felony convictions, then why bother giving him felony convictions at all? Jokes aside, I think the Judge, et ali, are going to regret this later.

      --
      Modding Trolls +1 inciteful since 1999
    7. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This guy has already proven that he will break the law.

      No he hasn't. He wasn't convicted, so the judge considers that what he did didn't break her interpretation of the law.

      From TFA:

      "despite admitting to his role and his authoring of the software that is certain to have led to real losses (estimated by the FBI at more than US$20 million) for not only the owners of the machines infected in the botnet but also those who had their credit card details stolen, and those who were targeted by machines in the botnet"

      He's guilty whether or not the court found him so because he admitted to the criminal activity. Given that he did so the prosecution might well have good grounds for appeal.

    8. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by sedmonds · · Score: 1, Interesting

      If there's one thing society needs to reward, it's extortion. Hiring this asshole is no better than hiring the mafia for traditional police services. They've shown excellent judgement and social conscience up to this point, so surely we can expect them to continue to do so once hired, right? Pay me, or I'll hack/beat/rape/kill you!

    9. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by nickrout · · Score: 4, Informative

      Rubbish he pleaded guilty and was then discharged without conviction. That is deemed to be an acquittal, but it doesn't mean he didn't intentionally break the law. The judge just gave him another chance. Note he was ordered to pay a large amount of compensation for his wrongs.

    10. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by gd23ka · · Score: 2, Funny

      # /sbin/brain --start
      # /sbin/brain --show-status
      brain0: running
      #

      "Now, granted you would be stupid to give him the root password of your server"

      He is the last guy on the planet that needs to ask for your root password.

    11. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I worked for a company that decided to hire a couple of ColdFusion guys who sent the company a bunch of their own credit card data.

      The guys were totally unprofessional and clueless. They had one of our non-programmer employees comment out an if statement in the live code over the phone! For other dysfunctional reasons I had to stand there and watch this happen and was required not to help or hinder in any way. That was fun.

      At the end of the day, the company was purchased, and the purchasing company fired these guys. I heard tell that one of these guys threw a chair a la Steve Balmer when they found out their juicy do-nothing contract wasn't being renewed.

    12. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wake up man.

      It's 2008, the cops and the governments ARE criminals now.

      Theoretically they always have been, but they're no longer afraid to brag about it in public anymore.

    13. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Ruke · · Score: 1

      This isn't quite the same a sticking a pedophile in a daycare. Nobody's going to be asking him to be their network admin and trusting him with their employee records; that would be a stupendous waste of talent, in the first place. The police, or a private company, is going to hire him to do the exact same thing that he's been doing - figure out how to get into unauthorized systems. Then he gets to explain to all the peons just how goddamned clever he is, and they get to patch their systems.

    14. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      So it is either hire him and earn loyalty for the term of the contract so that once it's over he knows much more than he needs to know about your infrastructure to do anything he wants with it, or he might just hack you.

      There, fixed it for you. Your argument comes down to "Instead of letting the wolf outside the chicken coup and let him try to attack, let him inside the coop and put him in charge of the security, namely making sure no other wolf gets in". What's the worst that could possibly happen?

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    15. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by totally+bogus+dude · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Well the article is a bit light on details and I can't be bothered researching any more, but if all the guy did was write the software then it's entirely plausible he didn't do anything technical illegal, in a "guns don't kill people, people do" kind of way.

      On the other hand, he almost certainly knew exactly what the software he was writing was being used for, so it'd be like selling guns to people you knew were committing armed robberies.

      If that's the case, then maybe the prosecution simply tried to get him for the wrong crime. Just like if someone brought charges of armed robbery against someone selling guns, I would expect them to be thrown out by the judge (though one would imagine such an obviously false charge wouldn't make it to court in the first place).

      I don't know if NZ law will allow them to try again with a more appropriate charge or not.

    16. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by tonyr60 · · Score: 1

      There is a significant difference between the media reports and reality. There is no evidence he has been offered a job with the police or anyone else. Police have explicitly said they would not employ him.

    17. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This man is very accomplished and talented as this shows.

      "Script kiddie" kind of accomplished and talented?

    18. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by MadMidnightBomber · · Score: 1
      Yes, I'd much rather he was locked up at the taxpayer's expense and he wastes his skills completely languishing in jail.

      Kiwi's have a bit more sense than a lot of people when it comes to justice - retribution is necessary, but so is rehabilitation.

      --
      "It doesn't cost enough, and it makes too much sense."
    19. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Outshined · · Score: 1

      I believe you will find that the prosecution fully supported the discharge without conviction. As has been said, this is a talented 18 year old with Asperger's. He hasn't been offered a job or rewarded, just comments made about his potentially bright future, possibly with the police.

    20. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

      Or you could throw him in jail or a mental institution. Problem solved.

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
    21. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by getuid() · · Score: 1
      Well, ...

      This guy has already proven that he will break

      ...the rules, so, guess that makes him perfect for...

      working for the police department

    22. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Jellybob · · Score: 1

      You said it yourself, the highest bidder wins which is not someone you want to hire.

      Why wouldn't you want to hire him. Almost everyone doing a job will jump ship to another employer if they offer considerably more money.

      Most people wouldn't join the Mafia, and have some morals, but I think in more cases then I'd like even people's morals are for sale.

    23. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Rogerborg · · Score: 2, Informative

      He wasn't convicted, so the judge considers that what he did didn't break her interpretation of the law.

      RTFA. The judge let him slide because he's (apparently) a retard. The theory seems to be: smart enough to steal from thousands of people, too dumb to know that it's wrong. He is effectively above the law, because the law is a liberal ass.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    24. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by mandelbr0t · · Score: 1

      do you want some guy who has only read about rootkits and trying to protect your system from them, or a guy who writes rootkits

      Actually, I'll take the guy who's done a bunch of reading but has the moral fibre to resist writing a rootkit. Rootkits attack known points of failure in a system architecture. Someone who has read lots of books about system architecture and a couple of articles on writing rootkits can effectively stop even the best of them cold:

      • Buffer overflow exploit worries? Run it on OpenBSD
      • Sandboxes, firewalls, DMZ, etc.
      • PAM options to prevent certain accounts from ever gaining root access
      • User education - definitely don't want a guy who talks about n00bs and lusers training the end-user (especially in security-sensitive positions)
      • LOGS, LOGS, LOGS

      I might not keep out Kevin Mitnick, and despite correct training in those security-sensitive positions, people make mistakes, so any organization that needs to trust outsiders is inherently flawed. But, I bet I keep out this 18-year-old prodigy. Hell, I probably keep him out by virtue of the fact that I run my server apps on BSD, not Windows. And I've never written a rootkit, and I never will.

      --
      "Please describe the scientific nature of the 'whammy'" - Agent Scully
    25. Re:What happened to ethics when hiring? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We did this. The end result is called the Dog.

  6. No conviction by RedWizzard · · Score: 5, Interesting

    According to a local story he was discharged without conviction because he didn't show criminal intent, rather he was he motivated by proving his abilities, and conviction would be unduly detrimental to his future prospects.

    1. Re:No conviction by bcat24 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Finally, a reasonable justice system! Maybe I should move to New Zealand.

    2. Re:No conviction by xstonedogx · · Score: 1

      That doesn't make sense to me. He knowingly broke the law to prove his abilities, but since he didn't want to do anything more criminal, he didn't have criminal intent?

      "Hi, your honor. I was just trespassing to show I could. Notice I didn't rape his chickens, even though they were right there. Let me go, please.

    3. Re:No conviction by Mista2 · · Score: 1

      He is also 18 and autistic.

    4. Re:No conviction by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 1

      According to a local story he was discharged without conviction because he didn't show criminal intent, rather he was he motivated by proving his abilities

      So it's OK to break the law as long as it's only to see if I can get away with it?

      --
      If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    5. Re:No conviction by pigwin32 · · Score: 1

      Actually I'm not sure what our immigration policy is towards German Mexican Norwegian Welshmen or do you have a passport for each nationality? We do quite like the Welsh because they like rugby too.

    6. Re:No conviction by bcat24 · · Score: 1

      So did you read my OmniCode or are you just psychic? :)

    7. Re:No conviction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to a local story he was discharged without conviction because he didn't show criminal intent, rather he was he motivated by proving his abilities, and conviction would be unduly detrimental to his future prospects.

      it should also be noted that the judge took the guys Aspergers into consideration, and the fact his parents are working on his social skills.

    8. Re:No conviction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But take a lump of jade from a river and the local tribe will have you jailed for 5 years. Maybe you better do more research before moving to God-zone.

    9. Re:No conviction by oljanx · · Score: 1

      Yeah that logic works. Hey, I robbed that bank because I really needed the world to know I'd do an awesome job designing vaults. This just in: 18 year old criminals from everywhere flock to New Zealand!

    10. Re:No conviction by duckInferno · · Score: 1

      A mild case of Aspergers, not autism. Confusing the two is like calling a wheelbarrow an automobile.

      --
      Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, watch it -- I'm huge!
  7. Where is the proof? by Planky · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The NZ Police force have stated they are not offering him a job, yet somehow all the NZ media are saying companies are lining up to offer him a job. I've seen nothing but speculation and rumours.

    While it's unfortunate that he has a form of Aspergers, the kid should have been convicted.

    1. Re:Where is the proof? by zonky · · Score: 2, Informative

      The crown failed to show criminal intent. (see above).

    2. Re:Where is the proof? by daniel_newton · · Score: 5, Informative

      fyi: I heard a policeman say on the radio yesterday that he definitely has *not* been offered a job at this stage. dunno why all the news stories are running that one.

    3. Re:Where is the proof? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dunno why all the news stories are running that one.

      Because they heard it on the news. That seems to be how most news stories are created these days.

    4. Re:Where is the proof? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      coz the media here are just as full of shit as Fox.

      TV here is fucking atrocious and caters only to those with Aspergers...

    5. Re:Where is the proof? by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      dunno why all the news stories are running that one.

      Because controversy sells.

  8. Crime Pays? by Fail-deadly · · Score: 3, Funny

    ...why! This goes against everything my parents ever told me!

  9. Job? Hah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How silly.

    Some of us do this kind of shit for fun. For pranks.

    Why would this Owen kid accept a job and have to work for someone else breaking into shit he may not even want to? It's boring as fuck. He made more money just infecting people's computers and stealing their CC numbers. According to TFA he costed them $20M of "real damages". You have a small chance making that kind of money working for someone else, and even a smaller chance doing it legally.

    Maybe I'm just an anarchist; but I don't want to get paid for RE'ing. I do it to piss people off instead.

    Ah well, at least they aren't portraying it as a BIG FUCKING DEAL anymore. Which is a good thing all around for crackers and what have you.

    1. Re:Job? Hah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It may not be considered a "big deal" in NZ, but in the states, the DOJ gets off on these sort of things. I know for a fact because I was on trial for a crime similar to this several years ago. I consider myself lucky with the ruling on the case.

    2. Re:Job? Hah! by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Why would this Owen kid accept a job and have to work for someone else breaking into shit he may not even want to? It's boring as fuck.

      No, that was a hell of a fun job when it was mine. We all loved it.

      There's no professionalism in hacking; there's "please don't destroy critical systems" but for the most part, one person at the target knows what's happening. You know their IT team is gonna sit there clueless, or panic wondering what the FUCK just happened. .... oh man. We are gonna own them so bad. Let's dick around with the aggressive admin and get him to ban himself off the network ^_^

  10. Re:Typical New Zealand by zonky · · Score: 2, Informative

    Hitting a child was *always* illegal in NZ. There was a defense in law for a parent of 'reasonable chastisement'. This has recently been removed.

  11. DUP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  12. Just write out proper security steps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Post them, and 100,000 sites at least will go down the following week. Easy, you won't have to do anything. Oh. A million sites? Damn.

  13. RTFA, he has Asberger's by FlyingBishop · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Honestly, he's an 18 year old with Asperger's. In other words, he's a lonely teenage nerd, with a literal handicap in the personality department. The only thing to do is give the kid a job.

    Asperger's, like autism, makes cause and effect a little difficult to process. That said, people with Asperger's also tend to be very methodical (as his computer expertise can attest.) Setting down a clear set of expectations for him about how to behave in the computing realm is difficult, but it's not the same thing as trying to reform a hardened hacker. He's young, and he's not entirely with it, at least not in terms of personal interaction. I imagine that's exactly why he hasn't been charged.

    1. Re:RTFA, he has Asberger's by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Aspergers kids have a serious social problem with cause and effect. This creates a big problem when you realize, yes, there is one girl out there that's actually special to you, and you just blissfully fucked up your last chance at happiness.

      Life can always get worse. Unless you did that, then you're done.

    2. Re:RTFA, he has Asberger's by Monkey_Genius · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      That's 'Asperger's' asshat.

      --
      I've got your sig, right here.
    3. Re:RTFA, he has Asberger's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Asperger's. The magical word that makes everything you do OK.

    4. Re:RTFA, he has Asberger's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually it's Assburgers

    5. Re:RTFA, he has Asberger's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Asperger's. The magical word that makes everything you do OK.

      You beat me to the punch. Most of these douchebags are intelligent, but they're not that intelligent. It's sort of a Slashdot trump card that so many like to use due to the large number of socially inept so-called geeks here. They have to be cool somehow, so instead of taking a shower and losing fifty pounds they develop a Spock-like affliction.

      This kid is a bomb waiting to go off; he's already shown that his moral compass is screwed up. If he screws up again I hope they throw the book at him and then ruin the career(s) of the person/people who suggested hiring him.

    6. Re:RTFA, he has Asberger's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree to a point with this, but just because you can break systems, it doesnt mean you can catch the same people. Its like anti virus companies giving virus writers jobs - the skill set required is quite different and doesnt really make sense.

    7. Re:RTFA, he has Asberger's by Hal_Porter · · Score: 0, Troll

      What's even worse about it is that I can see being a arsehole is kind of not your fault if you're really dumb (say IQ<80 ). But Assburgers sufferers, especially the self diagnosed ones are not that dumb. Sure they're not geniuses, but they're smarter than average, and they should learn some way to not be an arsehole.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    8. Re:RTFA, he has Asberger's by dutchcow · · Score: 1

      Proofing once more than we (me too) Aspie's rock.

      --
      Sig's are overrated.
    9. Re:RTFA, he has Asberger's by Pichu0102 · · Score: 1

      However, mental disability should not be a get-out-of-jail free card. That's a very dangerous road to go down, in terms of precedent. If a person is mentally capable of doing something like this, they should end up going to jail, lest something be set that could be used as a loophole for those who are much more malicious to escape.
      And also, if a person is able to commit such a crime, it shows they, very likely, know full well what they're doing, and if they don't, they have the capacity to do so as proven by their skills in other areas.
      This isn't a person who needs help since he killed someone since the voices told him to. This is a person who, despite having a handicap, is otherwise skilled, and if he can't take the time to realize he is breaking the law, then it's his fault and they should throw the book at him.

    10. Re:RTFA, he has Asberger's by Collective+0-0009 · · Score: 1
      I call BS.

      Asperger's, like autism, makes cause and effect a little difficult to process.

      All programming is, is cause and effect. I call this, pass this value, this happens, this returns, net effect is...

      So if he can code an exploit or botnet or whatever, he can understand it was against the law. Also if he can conclude that "doing this to prove his skills" is beneficial, he can conclude that actually releasing and using it will not be beneficial.

      --
      I finally updated my sig, but now it's lame.
    11. Re:RTFA, he has Asberger's by BenoitRen · · Score: 1

      Yes. The real problem with people with Asperger's is that they have difficulty seeing the bigger picture. They focus on details. So this lad was thinking making this program would prove his skills, but he failed to take into account that this could have really bad consequences when released into the wild.

    12. Re:RTFA, he has Asberger's by Collective+0-0009 · · Score: 1

      I am not really familiar with Asperger's, but it just seems a little out there and a little like a get-out-of-jail-free card. I will read up on it, perhaps that will soften my opinion.

      --
      I finally updated my sig, but now it's lame.
  14. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by mnemocynic · · Score: 4, Funny

    They're also behind their sheep. *ba-dum-tsh*

  15. Re:Typical New Zealand by mrbluze · · Score: 2, Informative

    Did you know that it is now even illegal to smack your child in NZ?

    Did you know, if you smack your wife in the shopping mall, she can press charges? If your wife turns up to the hospital bruised and battered and says that you did it, you'd be fronting the police also.

    Those laws aren't in the least extreme, since children are not in a position to press charges on their own behalf.

    I tell you what. this coutry is great in so many respects but they are really bad at punishing people.

    That is something I can't argue with, but the reasons the system is broken are the same why the health system is broken, education and others. They don't work properly because there are finite resources and judges are forced to give sentences which don't flood the prison system. You want tougher sentences for existing criminality, then you'll need bigger prisons. Then you'll hear "why am I paying $$$ in taxes to support those crims in prison, giving them three meals a day plus free color television, etc..etc..rant rant rant".

    --
    Do it yourself, because no one else will do it yourself. [beta blockade 10-17 Feb]
  16. Free Kevin! by capnkr · · Score: 1, Funny

    Oh...

    um, oops...

    I for one welcome...

    Bah.

    --
    "...there are some things that can beat smartness and foresight. Awkwardness and stupidity can." ~ Mark Twain
  17. lucky guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    they let him go without a booting

  18. Some more context might be useful by Repton · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Some more context might be useful. Walker had mild Aspergers syndrome; criminals were paying him to work, but the judge believed that he was unaware of what they were doing with his work. Even the crown prosecutor acknowledged that he had not profited financially, nor had he used the botnet (which, I guess, he helped make) for fraudulent purposes.

    Summary: Aspergers kid develops amazing programming skills; gets exploited by bad guys; when it all blows up his family starts paying more attention to him and he gets more sociable. Judge realises that he done wrong, but he didn't mean wrong; sending him to prison would ruin his life and cost taxpayers money, whereas keeping him out of prison will let his family set him straight and turn him into a profitable, functioning member of society.

    --
    Repton.
    They say that only an experienced wizard can do the tengu shuffle.
    1. Re:Some more context might be useful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      So I guess Bill Gates is off the hook too then? Aspergers absolves all.

    2. Re:Some more context might be useful by Zenix · · Score: 1

      The original story I read (I think it was www.stuff.co.nz) said he received about $40,000 for his part. It also said he only had to pay a fine of about $5000NZD, which made shit all sense to me.

    3. Re:Some more context might be useful by Repton · · Score: 1

      Hmm, you're right -- the story is here: http://www.stuff.co.nz/4619215a12855.html

      "[The judge] also ordered Walker - who has Asperger's Syndrome, a form of Autism - to hand over his computer-related assets to police." -- possibly that includes the money (or possibly he spent the money on computer gear). Of course, we all know how good the news media are at getting the facts and details right.

      I can't find the actual judgement -- it may not be online yet (since it was only two days ago).

      --
      Repton.
      They say that only an experienced wizard can do the tengu shuffle.
    4. Re:Some more context might be useful by dbIII · · Score: 1

      The reason for the disconnection between the expectation and the reality is simple. He was being pursued as a genius master criminal in an overhyped international operation and what they actually caught was a mentally ill script kiddie that is sorry now he understands what he has done. Judges deal with that sort of situation with petty crimes all of the time and this is just another annoying petty crime that just happens to be possible to inflict on a lot of people at once.

  19. Put him to work... by AnotherAnonymousUser · · Score: 2, Interesting

    In a situation like this, why *not* co-opt them? If the damages can be undone or leave no lasting harm, it surely makes sense to channel and redirect that skill. Sure, credit card scams and phishing attacks can ruin lives in worst case scenarios, or otherwise cause a great deal of inconvenience, but no extraordinary or lasting damage should have been done in this case once things have been set straight. Chalk up another point for the perils of data security in the modern world and put him to work in community service, have him serve a jail sentence, or...make use of his skills to help better the community he put at risk. Criminals are not always prone to repeating their crimes and he wouldn't do anyone much good if he's left uneducatced or put behind bars - the best he can hope for then is a job that won't pay much and leaves room for him to consider using his skills for selfish reasons. Better to put valuable skills to good use in the midst of professionals who could keep an eye on him and train him. It's not their place to try and instill a desire to follow the law, but they can certainly make it to his advantage to do so. And I'd think it more of a deterrent to know you're working with professionals that would be slightly harder to sneak something past than your average law enforcement. You run the risk of just creating a better criminal, but you also have the chance to create a better law enforcer.

  20. Re:Typical New Zealand by TallGuyRacer · · Score: 5, Informative

    As a New Zealander, I can assure you that, despite what has been represented in the media, it is not illegal to smack your child here. What happened was that the defence of 'reasonable force' was removed from the crime of child abuse. What that means is that you can smack you child, but you can not beat the crap out of your child and then claim you were just disciplining them.

  21. Close to what they should have done by Hojima · · Score: 4, Funny

    What they really should have done is force him to work for them. The logic for most crimes should be: commit a crime, be forced to work with police to prevent crime. The more they get, the easier it is to catch others, the more they get etc. Of course if he doesn't even have to do that, then I just hope he'll get murdered.

    1. Re:Close to what they should have done by negRo_slim · · Score: 3, Interesting

      An 18-year-old hacker responsible for writing a number of applications used by an online group called 'the A-Team' that allowed the creation of a million-plus machine botnet and a range of credit card fraud activities to take place,

      Hah, I'm assuming there's some exaggeration taking place here... and from the sounds of it they're on the same Old English ego boosting bender those kids are probably on after doing something remotely notable.

      --
      On the Oregon Cost born and raised, On the beach is where I spent most of my days
    2. Re:Close to what they should have done by Ihmhi · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, that's a brilliant idea. Piss off a hacker and then give him access to sensitive systems. I'm sure they have someone just as smart as he is to check what he's doing.

    3. Re:Close to what they should have done by Hojima · · Score: 3, Insightful

      who the hell said he'd get access to sensitive systems? He can work independently of their system. Hell, they can force him to work from home. If he violates any more laws, then it's more time.

    4. Re:Close to what they should have done by MadnessASAP · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hmm if I believe that it is stated in one of the fables of hackerdom that a hacker will be miserable and unproductive when forced to work 9 till 5 but will happily work from 12 till 2 AM. Perhaps forcing someone to do something they would gladly do of their own free will makes things worse for everyone.

      --
      I may agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to face the consequences of saying it.
    5. Re:Close to what they should have done by gnick · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Hmm if I believe that it is stated in one of the fables of hackerdom that a hacker will be miserable and unproductive when forced to work 9 till 5 but will happily work from 12 till 2 AM. Perhaps forcing someone to do something they would gladly do of their own free will makes things worse for everyone.

      Actually, I think your fable holds at least a little bit true, at least in my case. I work ~9-5 because it allows me to take care of myself and my family financially and because I believe in the work that I do. I worked my butt off in school to prepare myself for that.

      Working on hacking systems, gaining unlawful access, collecting random accounts, etc? That was just juvenile fun that I got a great kick out of back in my youth - And it was all done mostly for free (my only benefit was free internet access through hacked accounts - that was all that my conscience would allow me to steal, although I had ample opportunity and admit to getting an ego-boost out of that fact - I was a just a talented juvenile delinquent). And, 12-2 AM were preferred hours for that kind of work. I stopped because I wanted to avoid jeopardizing future employment. But, despite being more satisfying on a number of levels, I would not say that my ~9-5 work now is ever as "enjoyable" as my history of 12-2 AM residence in hackerdom.

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    6. Re:Close to what they should have done by jlarocco · · Score: 3, Insightful

      who the hell said he'd get access to sensitive systems? He can work independently of their system. Hell, they can force him to work from home. If he violates any more laws, then it's more time.

      I'm not sure I trust that setup. At the very least wouldn't he need an honest desire to help out? You really can't "force" somebody to do work like that if they don't want to.

    7. Re:Close to what they should have done by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Owen is a friend of mine. Perhaps you can refrain from that sort of comment.

    8. Re:Close to what they should have done by pimpimpim · · Score: 1
      At the very least wouldn't he need an honest desire to help out?

      I bet you never had to get something done from a governmental employee.

      --
      molmod.com - computing tips from a molecular modeling
    9. Re:Close to what they should have done by weetabeex · · Score: 1

      be miserable and unproductive when forced to work 9 till 5 but will happily work from 12 till 2 AM.

      I would also be glad to work only 2 hours a day and receive a 9-5 paycheck.

    10. Re:Close to what they should have done by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      allowed the creation of a million-plus machine botnet and a range of credit card fraud activities

      Nice friend you have. Perhaps you can refrain from that sort of friends.

    11. Re:Close to what they should have done by WingedHorse · · Score: 1

      who the hell said he'd get access to sensitive systems?

      He already proved his ability in getting such accesses. ;)

      --
      Fine print: I work in internet advertising.
    12. Re:Close to what they should have done by bipbop · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The geekiest way I ever got free access to anything was in junior high, when I downloaded the source for a skeleton terminal program for Turbo Pascal 6, which used a fossil driver. I hacked the super-basic terminal to play a MajorBBS game called Archery, which was quite hard for humans, but perfectly winnable for a machine; the game cost credits, and on the occasion that you won would pay out quite a bit more.

      I got someone to give me some starter credits, because I had no way to pay for a BBS account those days (I mostly called free ones). Then, I ran my terminal, let it play archery perfectly for a while, and ended up with millions of credits. The sysop didn't notice, or care if he did, and I played those stupid MajorBBS games for free :-)

      This wasn't illegal, or "hacking" in the sense used in this article, but at the time I was pretty pleased with myself.

    13. Re:Close to what they should have done by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Hell, they can force him to work from home. If he violates any more laws, then it's more time.

      But not in some white-collar resort prison!

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    14. Re:Close to what they should have done by dontmakemethink · · Score: 1

      Show me a system that isn't sensitive to someone who successfully hacked over a million systems by the time he was 18.

      "Ok kids, we've got a special guest today, Big Mike here is going to teach you how to stop a pedophile."

      --

      War as we knew it was obsolete
      Nothing could beat complete denial
      - Emily Haines
    15. Re:Close to what they should have done by SOTEC · · Score: 1

      I had a hacker friend that printer out pages and pages of user/pass for the local ISP we all used. No one he knew ever had to pay for net access.

      Those were the good 'ole days...

    16. Re:Close to what they should have done by Hojima · · Score: 1

      Just tell him you go to "anal raping" prison if he doesn't work, and the more he catches, the quicker he gets off.

    17. Re:Close to what they should have done by jlarocco · · Score: 1

      Just tell him you go to "anal raping" prison if he doesn't work, and the more he catches, the quicker he gets off.

      What if he catches everybody except his friends? It would look like he's doing a terrific job, while he's actually doing a favor for his old hacker buddies by reducing their competition and making sure they're ignored by law enforcement.

      Besides that, they just demonstrated that he won't go to "anal raping prison" by letting him off with no jail time after pleading guilty. Not only was he not thrown in jail, they may reward him with a job.

      The only way a plan like that could work is for somebody who was honestly just "looking around" or doing it just to see if they could do it. But this guy was actively trying to steal credit card numbers and take over machines. You'd have to be crazy to trust somebody like that.

    18. Re:Close to what they should have done by david.peace · · Score: 1

      Okay, modded as funny for the last bit, but actually a really good idea in the first part!

    19. Re:Close to what they should have done by KingBenny · · Score: 1

      i thought slavery was outlawed some time ago ? no ?? ok ... i'll take Two then :-)

      --
      Free speech was meant to be free for all... how can anyone grow up in a nanny state ?
  22. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by mrbluze · · Score: 5, Funny

    Typical, they are a decade behind the rest of the world.

    Yeah the "world" is so ahead isn't it. Poor Kiwis, why haven't they got all their troops in the middle east already, and a mortgage crisis, and incalculable foreign debt and nuclear power and massive prisons and... and when can I move there?

    --
    Do it yourself, because no one else will do it yourself. [beta blockade 10-17 Feb]
  23. Re:Typical New Zealand by zonky · · Score: 1

    This is not true. Way off topic, but in a broader view: It was illegal to hit any individual, including your own children. There was a defense in law of reasonable chastisement for parents/guardians. This was not defined clearly. A few juries had found defendants not guilty due to a lack of definition, when the defendant had clearly beat their children with instruments (not the musical kind either). There was a clear and obvious need to change the law, but a total lack of willingness from any party to write into the law exactly what would be acceptable, given that e.g, 30 year back, smacking the hell out of your kids with a leather belt or a rod was more socially acceptable. Bradford's bill wnet through parliment with the eventual support of both main parties. There was a clear will on both sides for it, but National took the opportunity to hand it around Labour's head as a noose. Most people if you asked them would now say National voted against it. There simply was no political will to amend the (current) bad law to define what was acceptable, and thankfully there is now no legal defence for hitting children.

  24. Not far-fetched by RedMage · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Without going into details, I got my start as a software engineer by hacking into a well known corporate system and being offered a job. I didn't get caught, but rather let them know about it (in a very nice way!) This was more than 20 years ago now, so I dare say the climate towards benign systems hacking is probably a tad more hostile today. Intent and methods probably saved my bacon, even then.

    --
    }#q NO CARRIER
  25. Re:NZ Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why can these troll never refer to pussy-lickers, tell someone to eat a pussy, accuse someone of being a pussy muncher, or say "eat my pussy"? Why are they all obsessed with cocks?

  26. Re:Typical New Zealand by zonky · · Score: 2, Informative

    Assault is illegal. There is a legal defence of self-defence. So you may defend yourself against a 'street thug' but not continue to beat him (to the point of e.g punishment or to 'teach him a leasson'.)

  27. I've seen this happen by greyhueofdoubt · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I worked as tech support for a small local isp a few years back, and this kind of thing happened to a guy who was hired with me. When we were all sitting in the conference room getting the legal brief, one of the stipulations was something like, "You cannot work here if you've ever been convicted of a computer hacking-related crime" or something to that effect.

    The lady said it with that haha-I-know-no-one-in-this-room-is-that-smart kind of way, but the guy sitting next to me got real quiet and asked if he could talk to her outside. Turns out he cracked into a bunch of university computers down in georgia or someplace and it was a pretty big deal, and he had used this local isp as his springboard. It was iffy for a while but they gave him the job anyways, since he did the crime when he was a young teenager.

    Reubens, if you're reading this, feel free to correct me if my details were wrong.

    -b

    --
    No offense, but I've stopped responding to AC's.
    1. Re:I've seen this happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for the name asshole.. now every Reuben will be looked at with suspicion.

      And Greg has a fetish of lobsters.

    2. Re:I've seen this happen by greyhueofdoubt · · Score: 1

      Oh crap, I forgot that HR and management browse slashdot for anecdotes about teenaged hackers in order to fine-tune their hiring!

      I'm sorry for all the horrible true stories I've told about Bill, Steve, Bob, Rachel, and Harry!

      I will go shoot myself now!

      Oh that's right, criminal records show up in any normal background check anyways. Nevermind about the shooting.

      -b

      --
      No offense, but I've stopped responding to AC's.
    3. Re:I've seen this happen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YOU INSENSITIVE CLOD
      -Reubens

  28. And he goes down for what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Followed this case closely.... especially the thing that brought him down: a UPenn student named Ryan Goldstein, aka Digerati...

    http://lamp.dailypennsylvanian.com/thespin/2007/11/29/penn-student-enters-the-matrix/

    A wannabe hacker who got kicked out of an IRC group frequented by a group called Splinter Security for being a pedophile:
    http://www.scriptkitty.net/files/Digerati-Exposed.zip
    [NSFW]

    Whose teenage angst could not be contained... and hired a NZ skript kiddie named AKILL... who agreed to use his botnet to do a DDOS against TAUnet... as this would somehow make Splinter Security Group realize how much of a mistake they'd made in banning Ryan for being a pedo and beg for him back.

    IN EXCHANGE FOR THIS: Ryan offered up some bandwidth on an engineering lab server so that AKILL could update the code on his botnet.

    The way they got caught: As it turns out, people notice when your 40,000 node botnet tries to download an executable off of a server that normally sees no activity.... ALL AT THE SAME TIME. As it turns out, that server crashes, the traffic doesn't stop, people notice something's wrong and call the feds.

    It's all quite funny.

  29. Re:NZ Article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Smell that? That's your karma burning.

  30. Catch me if you Can by slimjim8094 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As a society, we need to realize that criminals or 'outcasts' (for whatever reason) can be extraordinarily intelligent. As a society, we need to learn how to harness their skills.

    Frank Abagnale (the main character of said movie) turns from a check-forger into a designer of secure checks... by using his knowledge of what's hard to forge. We're all better off as a result.

    There was a kid a couple of months ago who had the creative and technical skill to make a CounterStrike map of his school. I sure as hell can't do that. Now instead of letting him do an independent study in game design or 3d modeling, or even teach a class (after school or whatever), they sent him to a 'special' school (where they send all the stupid bullies).

    We need to give people who possess this intelligence another outlet.... otherwise they'll continue to eat our lunch. Being on the wrong side of the law is obviously more interesting, which is presumably the appeal - a Google-style approach of 'work on cool projects on a flexible schedule' ought to keep them interested enough to do productive work.

    --
    I have developed a truly marvelous proof of this comment, which this signature is too narrow to contain.
    1. Re:Catch me if you Can by Cynic.AU · · Score: 1

      I agree totally. Although they cannot necessarily be placed in positions of trust, unless there's in-depth knowledge of their motives.

      If these people were all in gaol we wouldn't have spies or military hackers. Or guerilla marketers >_>

      buycocacolabuycocacolabuycocacolabuycocacolabuycocacola

    2. Re:Catch me if you Can by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Sure if you spot 'em before they commit a crime you should "give 'em another outlet". But after they commit the crime you have to punish them. Anything else is appeasement.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    3. Re:Catch me if you Can by bmajik · · Score: 1

      The justice system practices "appeasement" all the time. Case in point: reducing a sentence or granting immunity in exchange for testimony to convict a bigger fish.

      The law, owing back to biblical tradition, specifies the maximum penalty for a given crime. Any penalty from there on down to "please don't do that again" is legally valid, except in the recently fashionable "minimum penalty" offenses.

      If it is better for society or law enforcement or general order to forgive a minor crime in order to use that criminals talents to avoid or prosecute much larger ones, that's a card that most jurisdictions will play most of the time.

      The best bad guys will _always_ be better than the best good guys at this stuff. What the good guys have on their side is time and manpower. If they can get a high-talent, low-risk "criminal" to help out going after bigger fish, that's a good deal for everyone.

      Part of the prison system is supposed to "Reform" people for re-introduction into lawful society. That hardly ever works in practice. In the case of some of these white collar "genius" crimes where you've got a pioneering or expert-level domain criminal, reforming them may be as simple as saying "work for us instead of going to jail". If they follow through with it, the system worked, and everyone wins.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
  31. When we start by deesine · · Score: 3, Interesting

    letting some criminals off easy due to their "usefulness", then yes, it's a step backwards for justice.

    --
    damaged by dogma
    1. Re:When we start by gamanimatron · · Score: 1

      Yep. Sure is. But justice is only one of myriad considerations in the running of a state, or the function of a society. Sometimes it's appropriate for justice to give way to other considerations.

      Consider: 1% (or thereabouts) of the adult population of the US is in prison. Is this application of justice serving us?

      --
      cogito ergo dubito
    2. Re:When we start by menace3society · · Score: 1

      But yet, somehow, imprisoning a kid who performed a few technical exploits without malicious intent at the request of a few bad apples, just out of curiosity about the problem--and the joy of having someone finally taking an interest in him for something he did--that's a step forward for justice?

      Don't look at him as being let off easy, he's being taken in by the police as an cybercrime intern, so he can learn about what is legal or ethical to do with computers, and not least so someone in authority can keep an eye on him. The police will get a bit of work out of him, to be sure, but this is New Zealand: sheepnapping is more of an economic threat than cybercrime.

    3. Re:When we start by gnick · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Consider: 1% (or thereabouts) of the adult population of the US is in prison. Is this application of justice serving us?

      If it keeps people with a history of burglary from robbing me? Yes. If it keeps the people with a history of murder from killing me? Yes. If it keeps the kids off my lawn? Well, kind-of.

      OT - If it keeps otherwise law-abiding adults from smoking weed or people from using sex-toys in their own homes? Fuck no.

      --
      He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
    4. Re:When we start by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, because criminals are evil people who need to be locked up! Not fellow humans with issues. I'm not saying compassion absolves a person of their responsibility, it doesn't, but too many people seem to have this black and white view on justice, crime, and human nature.

    5. Re:When we start by Hal_Porter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah, because criminals are evil people who need to be locked up! Not fellow humans with issues. I'm not saying compassion absolves a person of their responsibility, it doesn't, but too many people seem to have this black and white view on justice, crime, and human nature.

      Criminals need to be locked up rather than given consultancy jobs because that will encourage other people not to be criminals. I'm sorry if this is too black and white for you.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    6. Re:When we start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But we have already taken that step backwards. How often does an informant get immunity because he rats out a mob boss?

    7. Re:When we start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although Owen helped construct and maintain a botnet, he never made any attempt to profit from it or approach organised crime himself. That's why the court was lenient with him. It's simply a case of misdirected talent that was being abused by more mature individuals.

    8. Re:When we start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The guy has Aspergers Syndrome. If you don't know what it is or haven't lived with it then you wouldn't understand that the court decision was made to gain the best outcome for him and for society. Punishment for the sake of punishment would not benefit anyone here.

    9. Re:When we start by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      No, you are still using black and white thinking. Criminals are not inherently bad -- what about someone who stole from a pharmacy to save a persons life? There are many examples you can find that are all shades of gray. You think those people who where inherently trying to do something good (even if it was actually bad) should be punished, or corrected?

    10. Re:When we start by Hal_Porter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We have laws. People that break them get locked up. Otherwise criminals could just bullshit about how they have assburgers and ADHD and poor relatives when they were caught and get away with it. In fact in your scheme they might actually get rewarded with a cushy consultancy job.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    11. Re:When we start by Mr2cents · · Score: 1

      Also, if I recall correctly, the Apollo program was developed by nazi's. So there's nothing new under the sun.

      --
      "It's too bad that stupidity isn't painful." - Anton LaVey
    12. Re:When we start by somersault · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, people that get caught get locked up. You probably have broken the law a few times yourself, whether it's speeding or recording songs of the radio and listening to them more than once, whatever. Going over the speed limit by 1mph makes very little difference out on a freeway, and you're saying that even if you do that by mistake, or because your car's speedo is slightly off, you're suddenly a 'criminal'? GP was simply trying to point out that not every person who has broken the law is a murderer or evil person, they could be someone who has otherwise been just like you or me, but were in a bad situation and made some stupid calls. They still should be held responsible for their actions, but it's not a great attitude to always think you're somehow "better" than someone who has never broken the law. Especially considering some of the crappier laws that are in existence. Are people who fight against things like prohibition deserving of prison?

      --
      which is totally what she said
    13. Re:When we start by umghhh · · Score: 1

      if court saw benefit in such action I see no reason why it should not give verdict the way it did. Sending people to prison is usually last resort and if it can be avoided and at the same time does not brake the system it is then I suppose OK to give such people other sentence than prison - they should be punished though as otherwise one may thing that one get away with one's unlawful deeds.

      I know that there are people out there that would argue that because it is not his fault (he is sick) then he cannot be held liable for his malfunction but the purpose of punishment is not only to punish but also to provide reason not to do things that society or its parts see as wrong.
      The victims of AS with all its deficits are intelligent people thus they can understand the consequences of his actions i.e. lack of empathy does not mean that one has to do things like killing others or do damage to the property etc as s/he sees fit. If they cannot understand what they did then they cannot function properly so they should be locked up in an sanctuary so that they do not harm themselves or others. It seems this i not the case with the boy.

    14. Re:When we start by robthebloke · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I used to work in a uni, and we once caught a student running a porn server through an open printer port (on an SGI irix machine). The uni would have kicked him off the course for such an offense, which would have only served to give him a bad university record, and no real job prospects. Since the student was obviously bright, and had an awful lot going for him, we decided that wasn't the best course of action

      Instead we chose to log the incident as 'the student has found an exploit in our network security and brought it to our attention', and gave the student a verbal warning over the incident (to hopefully steer him on the right path in future).

      If this NZ kid had ended up with a criminal record, his chances of a university education and his future job prospects would have been severly affected. So here we have a choice. Do you

      a) ruin this kids life, which would greatly increase the chances of him becomming a full time criminal (hacking can be more lucrative than flipping burgers after all)
      b) attempt to guide this individual back onto the straight and narrow so that he his skills can actually benefit society?

      I know which one I'd choose....

    15. Re:When we start by robthebloke · · Score: 1

      We have laws, and everyone breaks (some of) them.

      Going 5Mph above a speed limit.
      Drinking a beer when you're 17.
      Smoking a spliff.

      If everything was so black and white, most people would be in jail....

    16. Re:When we start by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      letting some criminals off easy due to their "usefulness", then yes, it's a step backwards for justice.

      Look how well it's working out for the Bush Administration.

      The pinnacle was when, with the Military Tribunal act, they gave everybody in the entire Bush Administration and every military contractor blanket immunity from ever being charged with anything having anything to do with torture.

      Now that's thinking ahead.

      But to be fair, the blanket immunity for the telecoms, not to protect the telecoms but to make sure no future case exposes any of the lawbreaking behavior of the Bush Administration, is also a pretty bold stroke. Future generations of crooked politicians and petty tyrants will have something to aim for.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    17. Re:When we start by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      We have laws. People that break them get locked up.

      Sorry. See Bush Administration, 2001-2008.

      I'm pretty sure that if we released all the people who are currently in Guantanamo Bay and put the entire Bush Administration there in their place, fewer people would die violent deaths and the world, generally, would be a better place.

      I'm serious.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    18. Re:When we start by hobbit · · Score: 1

      We have laws. People that break them get locked up.

      I shed a tear for the human race every time I hear a someone claiming that you should always stay on the right side of the law.

      Laws should follow morality, not the other way round. Government by the people, for the people.

      --
      "Wise men talk because they have something to say; fools, because they have to say something" - Plato
    19. Re:When we start by Hal_Porter · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We have laws. People that break them get locked up.

      I shed a tear for the human race every time I hear a someone claiming that you should always stay on the right side of the law.

      Laws should follow morality, not the other way round. Government by the people, for the people.

      This guy was helping people steal credit card numbers, he's not someone that broke the law because of his conscience.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    20. Re:When we start by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      The guy has Aspergers Syndrome. If you don't know what it is or haven't lived with it then you wouldn't understand that the court decision was made to gain the best outcome for him and for society. Punishment for the sake of punishment would not benefit anyone here.

      Would you be saying that if he had stabbed someone to death in a rage?

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    21. Re:When we start by CyprusBlue113 · · Score: 1

      I think you are confusing justice and retribution. The former is definately served by making him a contributing member of society with his talents. The latter is just the feeling you get for beating a dog with a stick for doing something wrong.

      --
      a handful of selfish greedy people are no match for millions of selfish, greedy people -u4ya
    22. Re:When we start by dave562 · · Score: 1
      You can find shades of gray if you want to argumentative. For the most part the people who get locked up for crimes are the ones who deserve it. If you commit a felony then you deserve to do the time. Statistically speaking if you get arrested for something, you have been doing what you got arrested for, for a long time. If your own moral compass and good sense aren't there to help you self correct, then society will step in and do it for you. That is the way the system works. Some of the laws on the books don't make much sense (like marijuana being Schedule I), but they are what they are. If you don't like them then work to change them.

      When I was in high school I did all sorts of blatantly illegal phone fraud kind of stuff. It was the kind of stuff that had AT&T security calling my house to talk to my parents (I owned a good chunk of their commercial Audix systems). When I turned 18 I knocked it off. I was never quite good enough to go work for the government but I knew enough to get myself into a lot of trouble. AT&T didn't offer me a job securing their System 75s either. What is the lesson that I'm supposed to take away from the situation in New Zealand? I failed because I stopped too early and didn't commit enough fraud? Maybe I should have sold the system access to the code kiddies instead of just giving my friends free 800 voice mail boxes?

    23. Re:When we start by tinkerghost · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because criminals are evil people who need to be locked up! Not fellow humans with issues. I'm not saying compassion absolves a person of their responsibility, it doesn't, but too many people seem to have this black and white view on justice, crime, and human nature.

      Um, the judge refused to put a conviction on his record because it might 'hurt his future prospects'. Hmm, he created & ran a botnet that engaged in CC fraud, he admits he pocketed over 40K in just a few months. Call me crazy, but I think that perhaps some official notice that he's a sociopath with no compunction against ruining other peoples live to steal from them might just be warranted.

      As it is, his punishment amounts to 4K in fines & 9K in restitution to one company - no restitution to the thousands of people who's credit cards he abused. So his 'punishment' is to pocket about 27K garnered from credit card fraud & abusing other people's computers. Yep, sign me up ... I could stand to be punished like that every quarter. Tell you what, make it every month & I'll cut out the whole spambotting & credit card fraud thing to save everyone time & money.

    24. Re:When we start by Creepy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would agree - usually young hackers and pirates don't really feel that they are doing anything wrong in a moral sense, and I was right there with them when I was a teenager. We thought it was fun and challenging to hack and pirate (and phreak, but that died shortly after I got into it in the early 1980s). Should people that didn't do it maliciously be punished for a crime they didn't think was harming anyone? It's a very subjective issue - are you hurting someone because of what you are doing? Did you know that you were hurting someone? Were you acting maliciously?

      Put another way, consider a yourself with a gun. You know guns are dangerous, but somehow you point it at me and shoot me in the face. Pertinent questions like did you know it was loaded? Did you intentionally point it at me? Did you intend to kill me, or were you completely surprised there was a bullet in it at all? Did you trip over a log and accidentally pull the trigger while falling? Some of these conditions will get you thrown in jail (or worse), others you'll walk away scot-free.

    25. Re:When we start by hobbit · · Score: 1

      No, the hypothetical guy in question stole from a pharmacy to save someone's life.

      --
      "Wise men talk because they have something to say; fools, because they have to say something" - Plato
    26. Re:When we start by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      Since when was this kids metal disorder the defining point in the decision not to put him in jail, anyway? People who break laws often don't get locked up, and sometimes for very good reasons. If you think that criminals are all bad and need to be locked up, or that all crimes must be punished, then you must be very naive to have such a black and white view of the world. Do you think this kid would be better off locked up in jail? How will that solve his problems? And unless you can solve his problems, then you haven't solved the crime problem, either.

    27. Re:When we start by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      For the most part the people who get locked up for crimes are the ones who deserve it.

      So you admit then that some people shouldn't be locked-up. So then, how do you know the exact circumstances on this case? As for your antics, if you are so much about following the law, then why don't you turn yourself in?
      And what about people who use cannabis to medicinally? Are you saying they should just sit back and suffer, because the law is so absolute that it's morally wrong for them to break it? I could be decades before the law gets changed -- some of those people waiting will be dead by then.

      As far as I can see, anyone who says that this case sets a bad example is being naive. Sure, it doesn't look right, but things are often not what they seem when you don't really know much about the situation (that includes most people not involved in the case). He has, after all, had to pay a large fine and seems to have learnt his lesson, and isn't a danger to society. You still think that some form of punishment is necessary? What would you hope it achieves?

    28. Re:When we start by rootooftheworld · · Score: 1

      yeah, and credit cards are doing great things for american economy.~ besides, if you forget a pack of money in a public space, and somebody takes it, its still stealing, but you have jst as much yourself to blame. would people start using frigin' good encryption sometime soon, or do we have to steal their identities and make mass murder with them or something? I've so had it with this whole society, that I'm actualy up for it.

      --
      I know full well that tobacco is bad for you, so I smoke weed with crack
    29. Re:When we start by dave562 · · Score: 1
      There are very few people who make it all the way to jail without being deserving of it. There is a huge system that has been established to maintain a sembelence of order in society. I will be the first to tell you that the drug laws which have deemed possession of a controlled substance to be a felony and punishable by time in prison are overly harsh. However having spent a lot of time doing community service in some of the poorest and most innercity parts of southern California I can tell you that something does need to be done to prevent drug addicts from wandering the streets and hassling the rest of the people who are just trying to get through their days without drama.

      Why the hell would I turn myself in? I knew what I was doing was wrong I stopped doing it. I'm not a Catholic.

      What about people who use cannabis medicinally or otherwise? I used it as an example of how silly the drug laws are. There are differences between those who smoke weed in the privacy of their home and those who grow pounds of it to sell for profit. I've never seen the former unfairly dealt with. On the other hand the later need to understand the fire that they are playing with. Here in California cannabis possession is a misdemeanor. You pay a fine and that's pretty much that, no big deal. The governemnt exists by taxing the hard work of the people. In the case of cannabis, since they aren't taxing the sale they will tax the distribution channels. It's wrong, but it is what it is until people stand up and change it. Getting hemp legalized as an agricultural product would be a good place to start. How are you coming on that?

      I know as much as anyone else looking at the case who might rightly think, "Really good criminals get paid." That is what it comes down to. There will be others out there who are working on refining their hacking skills and they will think, "If I'm good enough, no matter what I do, even if I defraud people for MILLIONS OF DOLLARS, it will just be a gold star on my resume." I don't think the guy needs to be punished anymore if he has already paid fines. Actually, that's not true. He needs to be severely punished. He messed with peoples livelyhoods. He took money from them. Have you ever had to deal with identity theft? Do you know what a fucking pain in the ass it is to get the credit card companies and other official entities to actually clear your name? The kid is an asshole. A skilled asshole, but an asshole. HE SHOULD NOT BE REWARDED for what he did. It is as simple as that. Maybe he got some sort of plea bargain from the DA so he didn't have to do jail time in order for helping them prosecute the people he wrote the software for. If that's the case, alright, good for him and he did the right thing.

      Since the word naive was brought up, I think it's pretty naive to believe that rewarding bad behavior will in any way disuade or otherwise discourage others from doing the exact same thing. There are two ways to have order in society. You can either raise your children right so that they have morals. For the children of parents who don't do that, you can make the consiquences of misbehaving so severe that they get with the program, or not... depending how much they like spending time in prison.

    30. Re:When we start by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      The kid is an asshole.

      You don't know that and that is the very point I'm trying to make. You have seen just one event in this kid's life and you are a fool to judge someone based on what you've read in news. You don't really know much about the situation. You are being prejudice.

  32. A-Team by clbyjack81 · · Score: 3, Funny

    So did he say to himself on the way to the interview, "I just love it when a plan comes together!"?

    --
    Cole's Axiom: The sum of the intelligence on the planet is a constant. The population is growing.
  33. good for him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    discriminate against a dummy, you get a dummies response. not all people are born criminals, but influenced by a greater source. This kid was knowing he wouldn't get far with an ill (I am that ill, just not mentally) and I have encountered broken before adulthood begins. I hope he gets everything his mind is capable of.Hating instantly with elistism is going to catch up. Look at america. I would swear I heard this story alot longer ago than this posting...but that is the mental phenomona my repeated daily internet is. I wish I was dumb enough to forget what is repeated.Good luck to the asperger hacker...

  34. MOD PARENT UP by Trogre · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Personality disorders such as Aspergers can be debilitating, but at some point we must all take responsibility for our own actions. No one else can.

    --
    "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hence the fine...

    2. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Tim+C · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, that point does come, but in this case it was decided that the best thing to do would be to give the kid a second chance.

      Do not expect him to get a third.

    3. Re:MOD PARENT UP by ConfusedVorlon · · Score: 1

      why does 'taking responsibility' have to mean going to jail?

      the kid _did_ plead guilty. He paid a fine. If he is now going to move on and become a productive member of society (possibly even using his 'skillz' for good) then that seems like a perfect outcome.

    4. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Trogre · · Score: 1

      why does 'taking responsibility' have to mean going to jail?

      It doesn't. Sorry if I sounded like I meant that - I was just trying to make the point that having aspergers should not be a Get Out Of Trouble Free card.

      --
      "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
    5. Re:MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Asperger's is also very, very vague, to the extent that I'm not sure the current diagnostic criteria are actually reasonable.

      I've been diagnosed as having it, although all tests for cognitive social abilities (facial recognition, ability to put yourself in other peoples' shoes etc.) read normal or better.

      I'm just vaguely awkward (which may just be a case of being somewhat inhibited and shy) and generally uninterested in putting much effort into social interactions. I'm not convinced it really deserves a medical diagnosis, much less one with such a wide range of possible of levels of disability.

  35. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by duckInferno · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'm sorry, what was that? I was too busy looking up electric bus timetables with my second-gen iPhone.

    --
    Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, watch it -- I'm huge!
  36. And this is why I love NZ by duckInferno · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Corrective justice > Retributive justice.

    --
    Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, watch it -- I'm huge!
  37. Thulsa Doom speaks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "My child, you have come to me my son. For who now is your father if it is not me? I am the well spring, from which you flow. When I am gone, you will have never been. What would your world be, without me? My son." -Thusla Doom.

    Get down on your knees and pray for the mercy of Thulsa Doom! It is only by His energies that you are allowed to live on His planet. You are unworthy to be in His presence and yet He allows you to persist in your pathetic life. If He desired to do so you would be dead before you read the rest of this post. You owe your lives to such The Master.

    Thulsa Doom!

  38. Re:Typical New Zealand by LaskoVortex · · Score: 1

    So you may defend yourself against a 'street thug' but not continue to beat him (to the point of e.g punishment or to 'teach him a leasson'.)

    Best is to beat them until they are incapable of moving and causing you further danger. Then you should stop.

    --
    Just callin' it like I see it.
  39. Gotta love greed by harshmanrob · · Score: 0

    I think the biggest problem with these "slashdot hacker hacks Bank of New Zealand and gets a job there" is the by product of some sick fantasy that people are less awesome than they think they are. Most people never get their "15 minutes" and I doubt a real hack would want his (which is usually getting hauled off to fucking jail).

    On a side note,money isn't everything and yes today's hacker needs to put food on his table I doubt there are millions of dollars just waiting for these people at the end of the rainbow being defended by the magic script kiddie Commander Taco.

    FUCK SLASHDOT! -- and yes, I am using plain old text now...getting fucking tired of HTML in the only site on the internet that makes using it a pain in the fucking ass.

  40. Good morning the worm, your honor by tinkertim · · Score: 2, Funny

    The crown will plainly show the prisoner who now stands before you, was caught red handed 0wn1ng people, 0wn1ng people of an almost HUMAN nature.

    This will not do.

    Sorry, couldn't resist.

  41. Re:Typical New Zealand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry dude. You a wrong. It is illegal to use any physical force unless required for safety (e.g. stop child running under a truck).

  42. False Dichotomy by xstonedogx · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Think of people like him as code mercenaries. They go to the highest bidder. Now, he is a person you don't want working against you, so why not hire him?

    1. Nothing is stopping him from doing a little work "on the side". You hiring him does not mean he is not going to write rootkits. It also doesn't mean he's not going to take money to work against you.

    2. He's gaining knowledge of your systems. When someone later outbids you, he's not only working against you, but doing so from a stronger position (while at the same time denying you any benefit you might have gotten from him).

  43. Re:Typical New Zealand by daniel_newton · · Score: 2, Informative

    Assault is illegal. The crimes act defines what is and what is not assault.
    http://www.legislation.govt.nz/act/public/1961/0043/latest/whole.html

    Is self defence legal? According to section 48 yes.
    Is using reasonable force to prevent someone from stealing my property legal? According to section 52 yes.

    This business of saying something is illegal yet one has a "legal defence" is muddleheaded. Either an act is legal or illegal.

    To defend oneself from an attack from a 'street thug' is not assault. To physically injure the 'street thug' for the purpose of revenge or punishment is an assault.

  44. sure make HIM the victim by ArchieBunker · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Waaahhh he has Aspergers waaahhh. Does that excuse his behavior? No. Typical defense of making someone out to be the victim of (fill in blank) to gain sympathy. He could have done something useful or even creative but chose this path instead. The only person you are fooling are the idiot mods.

    --
    Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
    1. Re:sure make HIM the victim by TomRK1089 · · Score: 1

      I agree. I have a few friends with Asperger's myself, and they still know what's legal and what's illegal. What they don't get is social conventions, but that's shades of grey, where law is much more black and white. The Asperger's thing is a bait-and-switch, in my opinion. Nothing more than a tactic to garner sympathy.

  45. Re:Typical New Zealand by BlakJak-ZL1VMF · · Score: 2, Informative

    At the risk of extending this rather off-topic fork, I feel its important to correct a mis-truth in the above.

    By removing the defence of reasonable force there is no longer a defence for smacking your child; how is that NOT illegal?

    For clarity, the truth is that it has always been 'illegal' to smack your kids (ala 'assault anyone') but reasonable force has always been a valid defence for parents, in the course of disciplining their kids. No longer the case, making prosecutions much more likely to succeed. Net result is that we now have busybodies and narkers stepping in...

    News coverage from when it became law: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/1/story.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10440080%5D

    Noted as the most extreme law in the world on the subject: http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO0705/S00223.htm

    A father gets a warning put on his police record for flicking his childs ear:
    http://stuff.co.nz/4354765a10.html

    The latter occurred because a bystander 'took umbrage' and an off-duty police officer phoned it in. The guy then winds up surrounded by 6 cops!

    Sorry but I couldnt let you spread mis-truths about New Zealand Law. It is illegal to smack your child here, because there is no legal defence for what essentially is an assault in the eyes of the law. Splitting hairs further has no value.

    --
    -.-. --.-
  46. Why is this modded Funny? by jesterzog · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why is this modded Funny? In this case it's a perfectly reasonable justice system. He's already been fined NZ$15,000 (~US$11,000) which would likely be a lot for him.

    The judge looked at the situation and the context (including the fact that he's autistic), took into account that the police weren't too interested in seeing him in jail (NZ police are interested in actually preventing crime rather than simply locking people up), decided he's young and is probably unlikely to do it again if given a second chance, took into account that he's received other forms of discipline already, noted that he'd actually realised and accepted the consequences of what he did and was willing to try and pay reparations, noted that an on-the-record criminal conviction would limit him in a lot of ways for the rest of his life and probably put him in a position where he'd more likely offend again, and determined that all of this information outweighed the possibility of a discharge-without-conviction encouraging others.

    This seems like a very good justice system to me. The judge is actually considering the case on its merits and taking into account that throwing someone into jail will just make it more likely they'll re-offend when they get out.

    1. Re:Why is this modded Funny? by bcat24 · · Score: 1

      Mod parent insightful, please. While my little jab about moving to New Zealand was tongue-in-cheek, my complement to the NZ courts was not. It seems to me that the end result was about as just and good for society as possible given the circumstances. I take my hat off to the judge, and I hope the kid keeps on hacking as long as he wants, just on the side of good.

    2. Re:Why is this modded Funny? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It works both ways though. Sometimes people who aren't sorry, and are clearly going to do it again end up with little more than a slap on the wrists (a bit of community service).

      Did I say sometimes, I meant often.

    3. Re:Why is this modded Funny? by aevan · · Score: 1

      Did they take away his earnings? He apparently was paid $36,174NZ for doing it....so that's a rather tidy profit.

      http://www.odt.co.nz/news/national/13407/teen-escapes-conviction-cyber-offences

      Malice might not be a motive, but greed could be one. Being one who follows NZ law cases on a regular basis, I'm rather far from impressed with it (like the cop getting out after 2 years for his part in a pack rape).

    4. Re:Why is this modded Funny? by delt0r · · Score: 1

      As a NZer this pattern is very common. Steal a million dollars via Fraud, get caught and only have to pay 100K and get to keep all the trusts you set up.

      --
      If information wants to be free, why does my internet connection cost so much?
    5. Re:Why is this modded Funny? by tinkerghost · · Score: 1

      Why is this modded Funny? In this case it's a perfectly reasonable justice system. He's already been fined NZ$15,000 (~US$11,000) which would likely be a lot for him.

      It's not reasonable because he created ~ US$20M in damages/lost work, collected ~US$40K in payments, and gets to keep his cash with no criminal record. That doesn't exactly sound like a reasonable justice system to me. Baseline he should have had to fork over all property obtained via the CC fraud & all monies received related to the botnet. Then posting a fine against him would be reasonable - as long as people are allowed to individually sue him to recover damages.

  47. Insert lame slashdot meme here by extrasolar · · Score: 0

    And to top it all off, the NZ police force were interested in talking to the hacker about working for them, and 'several computer programming companies' were also chasing him for his skillz.

    There, fixed that for ya.

  48. Re:Typical New Zealand by jesterzog · · Score: 2, Insightful

    this coutry is great in so many respects but they are really bad at punishing people.

    Do you see prison and tougher sentances as a deterrant? I don't. Unlike what I hear quite a lot of, I'm not personally convinced that the possibility of longer sentances even occur to most people before they commit a crime. Many are probably not even considering the possibility of getting caught, or just thinking it's unlikely.

    Personally I'd prefer that people didn't offend in the first place, and that people didn't re-offend when they got out of prison. There are much more fundamental and more complex issues to deal with in that respect.

  49. Hiring hackers - why it might not be a good idea by seifried · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Like I wrote back in 2001 Hiring hackers - why it might not be a good idea

    There has been a long, ongoing debate about this issue, and recently it has resurfaced in public. Should companies hire hackers convicted of computer crimes? The general theory is that these "hackers" are elite commando style computer security experts that can tighten up your network in a weekend marathon of pizza and pop. Often nothing is further from the truth.

    The first concern I would have is: are these people really any good at computer security? Now this may sound like a rather silly question, but it bears asking. The most obvious clue would be that they have been caught and convicted of a computer related crime. If they are such great "hackers" why did they get caught? Kevin Mitnick, a very famous hacker, was caught several times, and spent time in jail. Most hackers possess very little actual skill. They simply follow in the footsteps of others. It is very easy to download precompiled exploit scripts from sites such as rootshell and then use them to break into systems. Even assuming for a moment that this person has any advanced computer security skills related to breaking into networks, this does not mean they have the skills needed to secure networks. It is one thing to find a weakness and exploit it, but it is an entirely different matter to fix it properly.

    Securing a network takes a lot more then plugging a few technical holes. Even if I were to walk into your network and fix every single existing problem, it would not make your network secure. Security is a procedure with many steps, assessment, definition of needs, planning, implementation, review, and so forth, which amounts to a never ending cycle. Even if you hire a brilliant hacker that secures you against all known attacks, new problems will crop up. Even if your hacker has these qualities, their ethics are extremely questionable. There is a famous saying among lawyers: "never put a perjurer on the stand", which boils down to "if you know he's lied before, chances are, he might do it again". How can you trust your newly hired hacker not to slip backdoors into the system that they might later exploit. While it is true that any trusted employee might try to do something like this it certainly seems silly to put yourself in a higher risk category.

    A company has a fiduciary responsibility to stockholders. They are entrusted with their stockholders' money and are expected to make decisions that will increase it without unnecessary risk. Engaging in high risk behavior means legal liability. For example, would it be reasonable to sue the corporation for not taking proper care and responsibility in hiring someone they know to have offended before? Considering the position of trust most security administrators are placed in (they have administrative access to servers, monitor users' network usage, read incoming and outgoing e-mail and so on) is it really wise to hire these people? A person with administrative access to a server, or physical access to the network can break into systems and leave backdoors with nary a trace. Would you expect a bank to hire criminals convicted of armed robbery to transport money on the grounds they know what to look out for? Would you hire a burglar to install the alarm system for your house?

    While it would be nice if all criminals that got caught were rehabilitated, used their skills for good rather than evil, and never offended again, this is not a perfect world. By breaking the law, for whatever reason (curiosity, maliciousness, etc.) they have chosen to violate rules generally accepted in most countries and societies. They have (at a bare minimum) shown poor decision making, and while they may not specifically want to re-offend, they may be tempted by a short term gain and take a chance (as they have in past).

    Summary

    While it is possible to find a convicted hacker with the skills you want, it is exceedingly ra

  50. Nit-pick by jnork · · Score: 3, Informative

    Aspergers isn't a personality disorder.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personality_disorder#List_of_personality_disorders_defined_in_ICD-10_.28F60-F69.29

    It's a neurobiological disorder.

    http://www.udel.edu/bkirby/asperger/aswhatisit.html

    We are all, of course, ultimately responsible for our actions. ... Except that some neuro-atypical people may not be. But I think the judge had the right idea here.

    --
    Cleverly disguised as a responsible adult.
  51. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Kalriath · · Score: 1

    For 10c a MB on a ridiculously shit Vodafone plan with 250MB included data.

    --
    For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
  52. Welcome to earth NZ by oljanx · · Score: 1

    And he was reborn, and he bore a white hat. Are these people serious?

  53. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by endymion.nz · · Score: 1

    Um.. we do have a mortgage crisis, a power supply bordering on third world standards, a massive over representation of indigneous peoples in our prisons, a telephone network monopoly that strangles competition to avoid having to upgrade its infrastructure, a spiralling methamphetamine epidemic driving youth crime, we pay about US$6.50 a gallon for gas and have one of the highest rates of skin cancer in the world.

    --
    mediocrity rules, man
  54. Re:Typical New Zealand by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Perhaps that's because the NZ system knows that punishment doesn't really do much to prevent crime?

  55. Where are all the A-Team jokes..?! by comm2k · · Score: 1
    I came in here for all the A-Team jokes to only find err.. one?! Oh well here it goes:

    ... in 2008 a hack commando unit were supposed to be sent to prison for a crime they did commit(!), though the captured leader goes free after trial (to the NZ underground) and now survives as a hacker of fortune. If you have a problem, if no one else can help, and if you can find them, maybe you can hire...the A-Team. Bam bam bam!!!

  56. Re:Typical New Zealand by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

    Yeah, some people just don't get taxes. NZ is quite a poor country compared to someplace like Norway. I don't get all these rich people complaining about taxes while at the same time expecting the government to solve all these problems -- we just don't have the resources, and if you're so well off that you're getting taxed at a higher rate, you should be thankful that you're well off and are contributing back to the society you live in. Oh well...

  57. Re:Typical New Zealand by Domstersch · · Score: 1

    At the risk of extending this rather off-topic fork, I feel its important to correct a mis-truth in the above.

    Mason, the "ear-flick" father, was prosecuted for two counts of assault. He didn't get "a warning put on his police record", he was actually charged. The charges were in relation to both his sons, who were aged two and four. Neither charge was for an ear flick.

    Mason is innocent, of course, unless he's been proven guilty. But perhaps you should think twice before only listening to one account of what he did to his children. It is, after all, the court's job to decide the matter.

    --
    =w=
  58. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Domstersch · · Score: 3, Informative

    Firstly, we don't have mortgage crisis. We've had a few high-risk property investment companies collapsing, sure. But it's a long way from a crisis yet. And to compare our woes with what the US is experiencing is to really underestimate their situation.

    As for our "third world" power generation, two thirds of our power is generated from renewable sources (mostly hydro and geothermal). Which means, sure, we have times (like now) when the water in our hydro lakes is getting a little low, and we have to conserve. On the other hand, it means that we're that much less reliant on oil, a power source that's going to become more expensive, rapidly.

    Oh, and the rise of youth crime is a myth. A pervasive one, sure. But in reality, crime rates have been falling for twelve years now, and youth crime as a percentage of offending has stayed steady across the same period. Combine that with an increasing population (which you'd expect to see raise per-capita crime rates), and the rise of cellphones and associated crime reporting levels, and we're looking pretty damn low on crime at the moment.

    --
    =w=
  59. Re:Typical New Zealand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Personally I'd prefer that people didn't offend in the first place, and that people didn't re-offend when they got out of prison. There are much more fundamental and more complex issues to deal with in that respect.

    Personally, i'd prefer it if they didn't make so many stupid laws rendering the average individual just about incapable of not breaking the law at some stage. Many NZ'ers carry on about how dumb americans are, but from my travels (and I am a NZ'er too) we are not that far behind america in terms of stupidity esp in parliament with rabble rousing asshats like Winston Peters and intellectually deficient politicos like John Key.
      At least Americans have the RIGHT to free speech and stood up to the crown instead of being another arse raped colony, that goes of to war for "Queen and country".

    Fuck that.

  60. An other point of view. by chris_sawtell · · Score: 1
    Please consider that the good judge is trying to send these messages to the rest of the world: "Don't tempt our youngsters by leaving powerful systems open to the 'Net", and "Secure your systems".

    Reading these comments and others ones on reports of serious crime in the US, I get the very distinct impression that a very large sub-set of the US population are a bunch of intolerant and vituperative red-necks who have yet to discover the phrases: "There but for the grace of God go I", "He who is without blame, should cast the first stone", and that " ... and lead us not into temptation", has the corollary: "Thou shall not tempt".

    I just wish that the people who enable this sort of crime by selling computer systems which are insecure by design, and out-of-the-box configuration, could be brought to account.

    I know it will never happen, but I cannot help but wish it would.

    Perhaps networked computer administration should become a professional occupation with legally enforceable codes of practice.

    As far as young Mr. Owen Thor Walker is concerned, while he has not had an official conviction recorded against him, he, and his family, have suffered quite a heavy informal penalty.

    1. Re:An other point of view. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BAH... We'd probably sue Honda, too... because the Accord is the most often stolen car in the U.S.... therefore Honda must be liable for making a car that is so easy to be stolen.

    2. Re:An other point of view. by djp928 · · Score: 1

      Should we start letting off rapists then, too, because women wear such tempting short skirts and are so easy to overpower?

    3. Re:An other point of view. by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      That is how it is handled in Muslim lands. The woman is generally viewed as the guilty party.

      With the introduction of Sharia law in much of Europe being viewed as legitimate, look for this in England and Germany soon.

  61. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You must be Australian mnemocynic - am I right?

  62. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Trogre · · Score: 1

    ...a few high-risk property investment companies collapsing? Have you even looked at our housing market? House prices at eight years salary. Interest rates over 10%. Banks merrily dishing out low-to-zero-deposit loans to young families. Do you not think this is a problem?

    And don't get me started on the idiotic "no nuclear power here" meme started in the '80s.

    --
    "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
  63. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Trogre · · Score: 1

    Poor Kiwis, why haven't they got:
    "all their troops in the middle east already"
    we've been flip-flopping on that one for a while. It makes great political leverage though, apparently.
    "and a mortgage crisis" I'm afraid we do, it's just a bit further behind the US one.
    "and incalculable foreign debt" I'll give you that one, for now.
    "and nuclear power" to our peril I'm afraid. In the meantime we're burning coal, damming up rivers and finding other creative ways to screw up our environment.
    "and massive prisons" No, we just let the crims run the streets here. Much safer.

    But we do have the metric system, so as Dave Dobbyn put it, "Welcome Home".

    --
    "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
  64. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, we do have troops in Afganistan, and an anti-mine squad in Iraq (I think). We do have a mild mortgage crisis, but are doing well on the nuclear power and the foriegn debt frount. Unfortunately we are getting up with America in our,"per head of population" prisons.

    I must point out that we are ahead of most of the world.....due to the date line.

  65. Hacker? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds more like a cracker to me.

  66. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Maelwryth · · Score: 1

    "They're also behind their sheep."
    Sorry mate, that was an Aussie chick.

    --
    I reserve the write to mangle english.
  67. I got my first job this way in 1996! by rips123 · · Score: 1

    In my hometown in Australia I broke in and found 2200 credit card numbers of my then ISP's customer database. I told them about it and they offered me a job as their System Administrator. I was 16 at the time and the Internet was new. I wouldn't dare try it now for fear of going to Jail - even if my intentions were not in anyway malicious. The law doesn't really understand the hacking culture. In this case I don't know if Mr A-Team was quite so innocent in his ambitions but I don't think its necessarily a bad thing to hire someone who knows a system so well they can get in the back door without you even noticing. I'm not saying I'm an awesome hacker or anything but in my case there were no more breaches after I started working there.

    1. Re:I got my first job this way in 1996! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      same here. I 'hacked' into my schools computer network which pissed off most of the teachers who wanted to kick me out but the head teacher decided to make me work with the sysadmin as a punishment. After a few months they offered me paid work part-time while I was studying.

  68. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why haven't they got all their troops in the middle east already?

    Cos they don't have any armed forces anymore ?

  69. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Domstersch · · Score: 1

    Unaffordable housing doesn't make a mortgage crisis. Nor does a high interest rate. In fact, all it leads to is a housing market bust (high interest rate equals less people buying houses, equals house prices dropping), which is exactly what we're seeing. That "eight years salary" figure is dropping steadily, week on week.

    Sure, it'll be a while before affordability comes down, because debt is curbed by the interest rate. But it will come down. There's no sense being Chicken Little now.

    And don't get me started on the idiotic "no nuclear power here" meme started in the '80s.

    I didn't mention nuclear power. You did. And I was at least trying to give an economic justification for what I said (successful or not), as opposed to just flashing 80s slogans around.

    --
    =w=
  70. Hired former hacker fired after about two weeks. by Shirotae · · Score: 1

    To quote a recent online article:

    "Nolan Waithe Grant was hired Aug. 16 to work at the university computer system's help desk at a salary of $21,626. Three years ago he pleaded guilty to hacking into the school's Unix computer network."

    And according to this article:

    Nolan Waithe Grant was fired about two weeks after East Carolina computer services hired him to work on its help desk.

    The article does not say why he was fired.

  71. A move of desperation by Mick+Malkemus · · Score: 1

    If the police weren't desperate for a solution to this growing problem, this kid would be doing time. I predict this action will help to fuel the fire, and create more hackers "trying to earn a job". What the hacker himself has to watch out for, are people that he helped rip off. Some of them will take punishment into their own hands, since the authorities let him walk Scott-free. I wouldn't want that type of paranoia hanging over my head.

  72. Wanted, Dead or Alive by automag · · Score: 1

    "...'cause I seen a million systems, and I hacked 'em all..." Yeah. Hair Bands Rule! :-P

    --
    ---As my daddy used to tell me: "You gotta be smart before you can be a smartass."
  73. Who cares about ethics? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I currently work in the computer security industry, and am working towards getting my Certified Ethical Hacker certificate. Hiring some kid who went and did a load of stuff that was at the very least unethical kind of devalues the certificate and makes a mockery of those who seek to obtain it in order to rise in this industry. Loads of places require that their penetration testers/security analysts obtain the cert and having some other employer just ignore that shows that no, the cert isn't really required, and ethics are unimportant.

  74. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah the "world" is so ahead isn't it. Poor Kiwis, why haven't they got all their troops in the middle east already, and a mortgage crisis, and incalculable foreign debt and nuclear power and massive prisons and... and when can I move there?

    Troops in the Middle East. Check.
    Mortgage Crisis. Check (kind of - they've been high for years).
    Foreign Debt. Check.
    Nuclear power. No nuclear power - although a week or so ago we were running the risk of not enough power.
    Massive prisons. Not yet. NIMBY.

    You can move here anytime - google this: nz india pope

  75. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by MadMidnightBomber · · Score: 1

    a power supply bordering on third world standards

    No, you haven't - I used to work there and the only power outages we had were caused by transformers blowing up, not by problems further upstream.

    I grant you, too many Maori in prison, and Telecom sucks. But telcos suck everywhere :(

    --
    "It doesn't cost enough, and it makes too much sense."
  76. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Trogre · · Score: 1

    You're correct - you had not mentioned nuclear power. However the GGGP did (which is most likely what the GGP was responding to when referring to third-world power generation).

    --
    "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
  77. Re:Typical New Zealand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some people will only stop assaulting you when they are no longer physically capable.

    So to be safe, you should smash the fuck out of them if they attack you, hopefully paralyzing them for life, then they won't do it again.

  78. Most hackers aren't that smart. by jellomizer · · Score: 1

    For the most part we don't have a really good way of measuring the skills of a cracker (Yes I am old school and I don't like calling these people hackers) Oh you broke into a million systems by running a pre-made script all that shows is you have no life. But if you were without any scripts find a new security hole learn to exploit it on your own personal network or in a controlled environment, shows that you just may know what your doing and have the ethics to not cause collateral damage as well to boot. Who would you want to hire.

    --
    If something is so important that you feel the need to post it on the internet... It probably isn't that important.
  79. boo hoo, he has an illness. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    So, explain to me how having aspergers should get him benefits - he's socially retarted, then again, most geeks are ... and he's extra smart.

    sorry if I don't feel bad for him...

  80. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Unfocused · · Score: 1

    Actually, our hydro lakes are filling up with silt - and its too costly to do anything about it. The more silt that settles, the less water can be held in the lakes, and the worse the water-level problems are going to get. So its not going to be renewable forever.

    As for other sources of energy, whenever there's some possible alternative brought up, there always seems to be someone to complain that its ugly, exploits something, is too costly for some group, etc. So we're left suck with the hydro/geothermal/etc - which kinda sucks, given that our energy consumption is just going to keep increasing.

    --
    ---- Don't lick something unless you really mean it.
  81. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Unfocused · · Score: 1

    Yea, but Telecom NZ has a *special* kind of suck ;)

    --
    ---- Don't lick something unless you really mean it.
  82. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Unfocused · · Score: 1

    Just like our air force doesn't have any planes.
    (Yes, I'm a Kiwi)

    --
    ---- Don't lick something unless you really mean it.
  83. Next SF Network admin? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If Frisco's past hiring of IT staff is any indication, this kid is right up their alley!

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/07/16/sf_sysadmin/

    1. Re:Next SF Network admin? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Build a million bridges...

      Hack a million PCs and you're a network engineer.

      What city was that?

  84. Re:HERE IN THE USA by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

    Hi, Twitter.

    --
    Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
  85. Re:Hiring hackers - why it might not be a good ide by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ----Snip----
    Security is a procedure with many steps, assessment, definition of needs, planning, implementation, review, and so forth.
    ----Snip----

    Oh, man... do we hate documentation or what?

  86. Pfft by rgviza · · Score: 1

    The funny thing is all he did was cobble together known available exploits.

    http://blogs.zdnet.com/security/?p=1502

    "He is neither a hacker, nor a computer genius possessing some kind of unique skills, he's just someone proving for yet another time that it's not a matter of lack of capabilities for committing cybercrime, but a matter of courage to so. "

    He's a cut-and-paste script kiddie, not a talented system breaker. The real system breakers are the people that actually wrote the code.

    His real talent is using google and ctrl+c/ctrl+v.

    ROFL. A monkey can break vulnerable systems with a payload/rootkit someone coded for them and some balls. The NZ gov is a bunch of idiots.

    -Viz

    --
    Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
    1. Re:Pfft by Lodragandraoidh · · Score: 1

      Script Kiddie gets over on system! Film at eleven!

      --

      Lodragan Draoidh
      The more you explain it, the more I don't understand it. - Mark Twain
    2. Re:Pfft by rgviza · · Score: 1

      ...when they lack the ability to do so and yet want to acquire more at all costs, they deserve condemnation for their mistakes.

      -Machiavelli

      --
      Don't kid yourself. It's the size of the regexp AND how you use it that counts.
  87. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Awwww Kiwi's are so cute when they fight.

  88. old saying by BlackSnake112 · · Score: 1

    Keep your friends close.
    Keep you enemies closer.

    Maybe the companies/police want to see how he does his things so that can change their code to counter act it.

    1. Re:old saying by thedistrict · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I agree. Haven't we seen this in movies, in fact, wasn't in in Die Hard 4? I know companies hire hackers occasionally to go legitimate and test the security on their sites. Also there have to be former hackers that have gone legitimate. Not to praise what they do but often computer/internet hackers are very talented at their craft and could probably make very capable legitimate workers for software companies.

  89. Pfff... thats nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Back in my day if you ever wanted to steal a credit card you had to go mug someone! You youngins have it easy these days.

  90. Re:Typical New Zealand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The best way to prevent crime in society is to remove the criminals from society.

    This is usally done by housing them in jails.

  91. Re:Typical New Zealand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Deterrents aren't the only reason for tougher sentences.

    The longer a criminal spends in jail, the fewer crimes they will commit, because they are removed from the general population.

    Rehabilitation is a fantasy. Do you think that there is some secret rehabilitation scheme that is reliable, effective and repeatable, that the justice system isn't using because they are just too dumb? Get real you arrogant, bleeding heart son of a whore.

  92. Re:Kiwis are out of touch by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    They will in about 10 years if the trends are as I predicted. Right after they get broadband. :)

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  93. Re:Typical New Zealand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or throwing them into the wood chipper.

  94. cracks me up by omfglearntoplay · · Score: 1

    it always cracks me up when people (including hacker/cracker types" think hackers are so smart. being devious and doing things you arent supposed to doesn't make you smart. messing around on computers isn't some rare talent... seriously.

    so if you want to be a bad kid and play around, sure go ahead... get a few kicks, annoy a few people. but dont delude yourself into thinking you are special b/c you play a game that crosses the laws.

  95. "An anonymous reader writes..." by FilterMapReduce · · Score: 1

    An anonymous reader writes [...] the fantasy that hackers will be offered a job by those who they hacked [...] might still be the case

    Glass, is that you?

  96. Hardly a fantasy.. by Niobe · · Score: 1

    ..I know someone who kickstarted a fantastic career managing IT security for large organisations from criminal beginnings. Admittedly that was ten or so years ago and these crimes are viewed more seriously now..

  97. ugh by stanjam · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yep, this makes me sick. Let's see, hire a hacker to protect your systems. What a great idea! I mean, what are the chances that he will steal all our sensitive information and sell it? What are the chances he will steal our customer's data and ruin our reputation as a business so no one will ever deal with us again? I have a better idea, we will be proactive about it and make the whole thing public, so people can stop doing business with us now rather than after we get screwed! Hire a professional. Hire someone with ethics. There are a lot of people who know how to hack. Some of us choose not to because of this, umm, ethical thing. We realize that we should do the right thing. Next thing you know assassins will be hired to protect people, and bank robbers will be hired as Brinks truck drivers. When will business "get it?" Wait, that was a stupid question. Morons.

    --
    Open Source: Eroding the Digital Divide
  98. Re:Typical New Zealand by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

    So people who steal once to survive should be put in prison forever? And people who self-medicate? Where would the funding come from even if it was a smart idea?

  99. Re:Typical New Zealand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Despite your childish objections are ridiculous objection, the fact remains that housing criminals in jails prevents crimes. That is something New Zelanders don't realize.

    "Perhaps that's because the NZ system knows that punishment doesn't really do much to prevent crime?"

    If you have a problem with reality go ahead and "self-medicate", lol.

  100. Re:Typical New Zealand by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

    And someone who grows pot is really a harm to society? A troubled youth who stole a single car stereo needs to be in prison, at the taxpayer's expense, where he will just be make into more of a criminal, eventually to be released? Or do you think people like that should be in there forever, or perhaps you favor capital punishment? The only person being childish here is the one who won't even post with a real account.

  101. Re:Typical New Zealand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is your your comment: "Perhaps that's because the NZ system knows that punishment doesn't really do much to prevent crime?"

    My response is that removing people from society protects society. What you think are or aren't just laws and punishiments does not change that fact. This isn't a hard concept.

    PUNISHMENT PREVENTS CRIMES BECAUSE PEOPLE ARE IN JAIL.

    Maybe calling you childish was being too generous....

  102. Slashdot: a challenge has been offered! by david.peace · · Score: 1

    "creation of a million-plus machine botnet" Who on /. can out do that? Where's that X-prize man?

  103. Re:Typical New Zealand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As another New Zealander, you are quite correct. My problem with the situation is that what they have done is change a law such that almost every parent under the sun can be prosecuted by it and have then said 'well ok, technically you have committed a crime, but we won't press charges, honest!'. All it takes is one slightly frazzled mother giving their son a quick smack for misbehaving in the supermarket and some busy body to stick their nose in and start laying complaints and it could follow that person around forever. Not to mention the fact that I don't believe it was that difficult to prosecute cases of child abuse due to the 'discipline' defense anyway.

  104. Re:Typical New Zealand by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

    My response is that removing people from society protects society.

    And I'm saying that you can't just remove whoever you want from society without a very good reason, and that eventually, many of them will be released, anyway. What is your solution to that?.

    PUNISHMENT PREVENTS CRIMES BECAUSE PEOPLE ARE IN JAIL.

    Jail prevents crimes because they are in jail. Punishment is something else, and so is prevention.

    Unless you post under your real account, I consider this over.