Shaming Russia Into Action On Cyber Crime
krebsatwpost writes "The Washington Post ran a piece earlier this week that confronts the myth that cyber criminal gangs in Russia and Eastern Europe avoid attacking their own, pointing to numerous examples of late that counter this common misconception. The story draws on data from Team Cyrmu about distributed denial-of-service attacks (DDoS) that target Russian and E. European organizations, intel from McAfee about Russian banks and federal agencies that appear to be under control over cyber gangs there, and tens of gigabytes of data stolen via keyloggers that disproportionately impact Russian systems, including that of a top Gazprom official. The piece begins: 'If you ask security experts why more cyber criminals aren't brought to justice, the answer you will probably hear is that US authorities simply aren't getting the cooperation they need from law enforcement officials in Russia and other Eastern European nations, where some of the world's most active cyber criminal gangs are thought to operate with impunity. But I wonder whether authorities in those countries would be any more willing to pursue cyber crooks in their own countries if they were forced to confront just how deeply those groups have penetrated key government and private computer networks in those regions?'"
But I wonder whether authorities in those countries would be any more willing to pursue cyber crooks in their own countries if they were forced to confront just how deeply those groups have penetrated key government and private computer networks in those regions?
I don't come to Slashdot for these kind of thought-provoking rhetorical questions about ethical and legal gray areas! Just tell me who the goodies and the baddies are! Go USA hacker-hunters, wooo!
I don't know anything about your background or travels, but I find the picture that you paint of russia contrasts strongly with that of what I've seen.
Bear in mind that Moscow has been the world's most expensive city to live in for multiple consecutive years now [ 1 2 ]
What you seem to be regurgitating in your post is rhetoric, which you've taken it upon yourself to extrapolate wildly.
There are multiple vectors for disassembling your post, but the most obvious ones are:
The last check of google reports over 194,000 hits for WGA cracks [3].
I'd love to see the data behind your bold claim, in which you plead ignorance, but continue to fabricate 'statistics'.
On a closing note, I'm amazed noone else has yet flamed you for posting:
Maybe you should do some research in general, and pay a visit to distrowatch...