3rd Grader Accused of Hacking Schools' Computer System
Gud writes "According to The Washington Post a 9-year-old was able to hack into his county's school computer network and change such things as passwords, course work, and enrollment info. From the article: 'Police say a 9-year-old McLean boy hacked into the Blackboard Learning System used by the county school system to change teachers' and staff members' passwords, change or delete course content, and change course enrollment. One of the victims was Fairfax Superintendent Jack D. Dale, according to an affidavit filed by a Fairfax detective in Fairfax Circuit Court this week. But police and school officials decided no harm, no foul. The boy did not intend to do any serious damage, and didn't, so the police withdrew and are allowing the school district to handle the half-grown hacker.'"
Zero Cool strikes again. Mess with the best, die like the rest!
Some dumb teacher probably just left their admin password laying around on a post-it note, or hell even left some admin interface open unattended, and doesn't want to admit it. Therefor, "hacking"!
Pleasantly surprised by the last part of the summary:
"But police and school officials decided no harm, no foul. The boy did not intend to do any serious damage, and didn't, so the police withdrew and are allowing the school district to handle the half-grown hacker."
Didn't see that one coming. I thought I was in for a story of stupid teachers overreacting and a poor kid dealt with harshly.
Some of my favourite people are from th US; Vonnegut, Chomsky, Bill Hicks.
...come immediatley to mind as I RTFA, "Terry Childs". This kid, admittedly, commits a crime by breaking into the school's computer system. Childs, on the other hand, did arguably prevent harm by carrying out his duty to maintain the network's security, and he's the one in jail.
[shakes head]
He deserves it for bringing to light a serious gaping flaw in their e-security without doing serious damage. If a 9 year old, ANY 9 year old can break into your system, there are some major flaws that could easily be exploited in some bad ways.
Just curious.
...so the police withdrew and are allowing the school district to handle the half-grown hacker.
Of course, that's just what they are telling the press. In reality, of course, the boy is being put in charge of a supersecret underground Government cybersecurity lab on a deserted island even as we speak.
The words, hack (crack) blackboard, and see how many cases come up. That thing is an abomination of teaching software that, unfortunately, is used across the country. Let the kid off. He did something that everybody else has already done.
Send this kid to study with Knuth immediately.
I am officially gone from
It is more plausible that the school's Blackboard was mis-managed/mis-configured to allow access to areas it was not supposed to.
Doesn't seem plausible he hacked it, probably someone walked away from a machine while still logged in. Or this: http://xkcd.com/327/
I've used the system he hacked into, Blackboard. It seriously sucks, has security holes a blind lemur could exploit, and is so hard-to-use many of the teachers refused to use it (at a tech school!). If the school kept using it, they deserved someone hacking it.
I could hack that POS in my sleep, and have multiple times. The University of Redlands has some of the most incompetent IT administrators EVER - hack blackboard, get access to student accounts, surf the web on their network with not a goddamned one of them being the wiser, under an account that I could use to frame that person.
Doesn't help their wireless AP broadcasts into my apartment at such a high power level that it blocks out most of the other wireless APs when it's engaged. 5 bars on my router two feet away? As soon as a game starts up in their sports complex, I lose my router and I get a big fat UoR signal. I hack it EVERY SINGLE TIME and they're still not smart enough after several warnings to ditch blackboard and ResNet and find something more reliable.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
Same for me! Right up until I realized the kid was 9....
Come on, really? You're gonna make that comparison?
I thought I was only kidding when I said the security on Blackboard was so bad a 9 year old could hack it.
if hes really that good then why did he get caught? o wait nvm because otherwise he wouldn't have been on /.
epic sig..... ya i got nothing
childs had a god complex: "i am the only one who has the right to administer this network"
he built the network for san francisco. san francisco had every right to do whatever it wanted to do with the network they hired him to build. if san francisco wanted to hand out passwords to the network to hackers, san francisco has that right, and childs has no right to any say on the matter
the man was not protecting the security of the network, the man believed he and he alone had a right to decide what to do with the network. the man has boundary issues: he felt attached to the network like it was his child. he probably invested a lot of time and energy into it, but so what? there's such a thing as taking pride in your work... then there is psychotically remaining attached to your work and assuming you and you alone can forever more decide how your work is used
he was reimbursed for his work. end of story. his actions are completely indefensible. the man needs psychological help, you have no valid basis to defend the wackjob. lock childs up, he only deserves punishment and psychological treatment
and furthermore WHERE THE HELL DO YOU GET OFF COMPARING TERRY CHILDS TO A NINE YEAR OLD
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
... If I were the school's network admin, or even the district tech person. Granted that this may be a matter of simply finding a password/watching a password. I remember when I was in 6th grade, we had a teacher who would hunt and peck his way through is password. It was easy enough to catch it.
Pity it doesn't apply in all cases.
I guess embarrassing a school board over lax security is less serious than embarrassing the Pentagon over a complete absence of it.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
Law enforcement agencies in Northern Virginia say you have no right to know what they're doing
"The manager found that most of those targeted worked at Spring Hill Elementary or Churchill Road Elementary schools and that a student's account at Spring Hill had been enabled with administrator privileges"
It would seem that an admin turned a student's account into an admin account. Since only one account is mentioned I would bet dollars to doughnuts that the accidentally elevated account belonged to the 9 year old. This is just a case of ineptitude by some admin and not hacking or cracking in any way.
...their IT folks are not smarter than their 5th graders.
Reminds me of the time my HS computer teacher accused me of "hacking" into the network.
What did I do? Pretty much opened Internet Explorer.
Someone had set it's homepage to a local network drive instead of the usual homepage. I noticed this and opened up the folder to see what it was (it was a dev server for the school website or something). I was going to poke around but then it dawned on me that school website code was going to be horribly boring to read so I closed the window and forgot about it.
So then the teacher comes up to me and accuses me of guessing the computer name, poking around in its shares in Windows Explorer and somehow hacking past password protection. Keep in mind there was, in fact, no password protection (or my account was mistakenly given access).
I guess I need an ending to this story hmm. Later that year she left the school right before the end-of-school awards ceremony (she was the only teacher ever to not be present and not give any awards out while I attended. Every teacher AT LEAST gave certificates out for As and most also gave plaques out for special accomplishments). She had even promised T-shirts to anyone who could type over 50-wam in a contest thing she ran. I scored 53 and I'm still waiting for my T-shirt.
login: iladministrator
pass: xxx
Icon Unisys for life
They should confiscate his accoustic coupler. Otherwise he will play war games all over again.
Come on, really? You're gonna make that comparison?
Comparison seems fair to me.
Terry Childs name is Childs, the kid is a child... the cases are very similar.
Wow, if a nine-year-old can hack into your servers and start changing stuff, you really ned to wonder about your security setup.
is his name by any chance "Bobby Tables"?
But I thought that the closed computing devices we have today, like the iPad and Windows devices, were going to discourage this sort of curiosity and tinkering.
Thanks for all the fuss about nothing, Cory Doctorow!
Does it still violate child labor laws if I hire him as an independent contractor?
A child of nine could hack this system. Send someone to fetch a child of nine.
http://www.bynarystudio.com
terry childs went to the RIAA school of system administration
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
...won't somebody think of the chi..... oh wait.
The Post's story got it wrong. The Bb system wasn't hacked or exploited - access was gained by someone who found out and used a valid teacher's login. New story from Post today corrects/clarifies the original story:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/15/AR2010041505517.html
Local Digest
Friday, April 16, 2010
VIRGINIA
Boy had teacher's computer password
A 9-year-old Fairfax County boy who changed course content and passwords in the Fairfax school system's online teaching system -- including the superintendent's -- accessed it using a teacher's password, officials said Thursday.
The school district detected the problems last month and, with the help of Fairfax police, tracked them to a McLean boy's home computer.
Police obtained a search warrant that said Fairfax's version of the widely used Blackboard Learning System "had been hacked" and that the boy's Blackboard account had "administrator privileges."
Blackboard and school officials clarified Thursday that the boy had not found and exploited a security vulnerability, but rather that he had obtained a teacher's password.
Fairfax schools spokesman Paul Regnier said the boy was able to use that access to enroll other users, including Superintendent Jack D. Dale, into his class and could then change their passwords.
-- Tom Jackman
his actions ARE defensible
so either you would make a very good defense lawyer, or your understanding of the situation is superior to mine
the way i understood the story, multiple levels of the administration made multiple requests on childs for access and he psychotically refused, for a long period of time, even as the press got wind of the story
then he grandstandingly renders access only to the mayor, in person. pffft
i mean, if i built a system for the pentagon and then insisted i would only give access to president obama in person, after repeated requests for access over multiple levels of pentagon hierarchy over a long period of time, that anyone lower than the very top man was merely a "worker bee", then you can safely call me psychotic
so either my understanding is wrong, or you're a smooth talker
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
System not hacked/exploited - someone found a teacher password to get access. New Post story today updates the first one:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/15/AR2010041505517.html
Local Digest
Friday, April 16, 2010
VIRGINIA
Boy had teacher's computer password
A 9-year-old Fairfax County boy who changed course content and passwords in the Fairfax school system's online teaching system -- including the superintendent's -- accessed it using a teacher's password, officials said Thursday.
The school district detected the problems last month and, with the help of Fairfax police, tracked them to a McLean boy's home computer.
Police obtained a search warrant that said Fairfax's version of the widely used Blackboard Learning System "had been hacked" and that the boy's Blackboard account had "administrator privileges."
Blackboard and school officials clarified Thursday that the boy had not found and exploited a security vulnerability, but rather that he had obtained a teacher's password.
Fairfax schools spokesman Paul Regnier said the boy was able to use that access to enroll other users, including Superintendent Jack D. Dale, into his class and could then change their passwords.
-- Tom Jackman
When I was 16 I learned about SQL injection and inserted fake records into the high school database. I'll admit, my vulgarity probably wasn't necessary. I got a very firm slap on the wrist from the principal and my parents, and a very firm handshake by the IT Teacher. The next year I finished all the programming (VB) modules in the Computer Technology class, and did web page design (basic HTML, no scripts or css). In my last year, the IT teacher approached me about helping him rebuild the system I broke into in my first year. I of course felt obligated, knowing the damage I COULD have done.
Man... Good times...
I look back on it now and it seems obvious why I could never keep a girlfriend...
heck yeah Ender!!
Is the proprietary online education platform with an apparent side job as a patent troll, if memory serves.
Given its closed nature, I wouldn't be surprised if their software is full to the brim of SQL injection, XSS and CSRF vulnerabilities that an interested elementary school student can exploit.
Quick, someone measure his hacker-midiclorians.
Oh, you mean little Bobby Table?
') DROP TABLE
There's an xkcd for that, but it's firewalled at work. I can only assume one of the IT folks reads /.
---
ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
Given the media's propensity to use the word "hack" whenever possible, did the child actually "hack" Blackboard, or was he able to guess someone's password?
Or, as I've seen on rare occasions, did an administrator give the boy administrator access by mistake? (Sometimes, teachers will attemt to make a student a TA and select the wrong option.)
-David
I don't think many teachers really understand the word. I got suspended from school for "hacking" and bringing down the school network.
I was in computer lab, which were all Macs, and not "Cool" Macs everyone has now, but the big square brick shaped monochrome screen macs. We had one PowerPC I think. Anyway I digress. So I was in lab finishing up an assignment, when I saw an option in the menu to "encrypt" my floppy disk after I had finished saving (as if I haven't dated myself already). Knowing what encryption was, and thinking it was neat that the option was available on the Mac I encrypted my floppy with a password to protect all my really important and top secret labs etc..
Fast forward to the next day. I get brought into the Principals office in the morning, and accused of taking down the system. To which I have no idea what the hell they are talking about.
Anyway long story short, my buddy that was sitting beside me, saw what I did, thought it was neat, and tried it himself. The differance being rather than selecting the "A:" drive... yes that's right he selected the "C:" drive. Encrypted the whole damn computer.
Big deal you say? Well this was back when people still used "Ring" networks, which required being able to talk to its immediate two networked neighbors to function properly. One of them now a lump of encrypted uselessness. Though in defense the system was set up by our Grade 10 math teacher, not an IT professional.
The guy also had no idea what he had entered for his password. Whole machine had to be wiped and re-installed. Which they also made me do as "punishment" after my suspension.
Why did I get accused? Because they basically said my buddy wasn't smart enough to do it on his own, and that I "enabled" him to do it. So ya... that's how I got suspended for "hacking" when I was younger. I would not be surprised if it is something as idiotic or more so in this case.
The kid was just looking for a game on that puter. ummm "Global Thermonuclear War" I think.
Blackboard has LOTS of XSS potential. Even just as a teachers assistant, XSS is possible. I used it to put blinking text on the main screen for announcements, but it could be used for much more devious purposes. There are probably possible SQL injections, too--- but that would have put me in quite a bit more legal quandary if I tried that. XSS could be used to create a virus and steal administrative authority (think myspace virus) Moral of the story: Blackboard sucks!
That one is definately my favourite.
From TFA ... "a student's account at Spring Hill had been enabled with administrator privileges"
Sounds like the kid didn't hack anything, didn't use a login from a teacher or administrator. Looks like his account was "enabled with administrator privileges."
They probably shouldn't have used the passwords 'pencil' and 'joshua'?
Today's WaPo story clarifies - not a hack but someone found and used a valid teacher password:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/15/AR2010041505517.html
Same for me! Right up until I realized the kid was 9....
So that means we should try him as an adult, right? *snark*
I had great hopes that the psychopathic shitheads running the schools in the '70s were all sterile, but TFA and comments prove otherwise.
Why, without your clothes, you're naked, Miss Dudley!
My first year of high school I was lucky to be at a school where they just equipped a lab with brand new Mac Classic for robotic/domotic class. The software used to control our little cardboard houses was just a hyper card stack but it was quite well done.
The Macs were placed back to back in pairs on each table. One day at the end of classes, just for fun I decided to invert all the ADB cables so the keyboard and mouse of Mac1 would control Mac2 and vice-versa. I left school giggling about the poor students that would find their mouse controlling another computer next morning. I know it's not that funny but it made me laugh back in the days.
Next day in the afternoon, I get called to the principal office. She tells me "We know you stayed late yesterday to hack the new computer lab". I'm sorry I say? I didn't hack anything. "You are the only one in the class with the technical abilities to hack computers so we know it was you.". I couldn't deny what I did even if I never considered this hacking so I just admitted that I inverted the cables.
Apparently, in the morning the school called a consultant to fix what I did. They just re-inverted the cables and billed the school about $500.
I got suspended for 1 week and had to do community services to pay the $500 back to the school. All of this because of a practical joke that wasn't even that funny.
I guess my story is, teachers and principals can be idiots too and they sure lack a sense of humor.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/15/AR2010041505517.html
And yeah, I work for a community center where people are more interested in usability than anything else. If I told you half of what goes on here, your hair would stand on end.
Blackboard has a bad security record (seriously, just read Bugtraq or look up all its security holes) and is a piece of crap even if you manage to secure it (my college used it, but I managed to escape having to use it most of the time because the teachers didn't want to use it).
I'd propose a different headline: Blackboard: So Bad Even 9-Year-Olds Can Hack It
Where the fuck were your parents in all this???
These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
do you clear everything with the ceo in person?
sound reasonable?
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
In a high school programming class, I disabled the whole computer's security protocols essentially so that I could install IE5 (I think it was), which was a far better web browser than IE4 they had been using before...
The security system was configured by an administrator. It was based around the autoexec.bat file. The C drive was blocked off to where you couldn't access it from my computer, explorer, or the like. So I open notepad, choose C:\ in the drop down, and I'm in. So I open autoexec.bat and I had permissions to edit it. So I comment out the one line pertaining to their security program and reboot (I re-enabled security after I installed IE5).
Luckily, I didn't get suspended or the like. My punishment was that a friend and I had to stay in the class instead of going to the computer lab to do our work like everyone else for a week. Seems like a reasonable punishment for the act.
A Google search "returns Results 1 - 10 of about 44,100 for users that have hacked blackboard. (0.18 seconds). "
If the story is fact, to hack a login a 3rd grader would need, a high IQ, keyboarding dexterity, combinatorics, logic, substantial reading level, perserverance, and no supervision.
A case sensitive pasword would befuddle most 10 year-olds and a 3 miss wait would prompt ADD! I don't see them making an organized guess list, writing attack code, or even knowing how or where to find these malicious tools. I smell a rat. Inside job or cover-up. Can't picture them at a terminal running through "miss apple enter 12345 enter 555-phone enter, or hack via remote portal with code. Not at 10 years.
I imagine this has already been said, in some form or other, but if their systems were SO insecure that an 8 year old could compromise them, then the school officials themselves should be charged with gross incompetence and fired summarily!
Sometimes, real fast is almost as good as real-time.
New Post story corrects the issue - Bb not hacked, access was gained by someone who found and used a valid teacher login:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/15/AR2010041505517.html
This is the pinnacle of 3rd-grade hackers now? Nope, they just don't make them like they used to.
"Please describe the scientific nature of the 'whammy'" - Agent Scully
"San Francisco policy at the time was that passwords would only be given to the Mayor"
no city the size of san francisco would ever have such a policy
you're a baldfaced lying sleazebag
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
New Washington Post story today clarifies that it was NOT a hack of Bb – someone found and used a valid teacher login. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/15/AR2010041505517.html Local Digest Friday, April 16, 2010; B02 VIRGINIA Boy had teacher's computer password A 9-year-old Fairfax County boy who changed course content and passwords in the Fairfax school system's online teaching system -- including the superintendent's -- accessed it using a teacher's password, officials said Thursday. The school district detected the problems last month and, with the help of Fairfax police, tracked them to a McLean boy's home computer. Police obtained a search warrant that said Fairfax's version of the widely used Blackboard Learning System "had been hacked" and that the boy's Blackboard account had "administrator privileges." Blackboard and school officials clarified Thursday that the boy had not found and exploited a security vulnerability, but rather that he had obtained a teacher's password. Fairfax schools spokesman Paul Regnier said the boy was able to use that access to enroll other users, including Superintendent Jack D. Dale, into his class and could then change their passwords. -- Tom Jackman
I say this as an educational IT person. It caused more problems than it solved and I wound up removing it from all the computers
within a year of starting my job at my school.
Robdude was simply trying to make it easier to do his class work with no malicious intent, you were hacking. You got off easy, he got screwed.
then what IS he being charged with
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
that 50% of the people posting on how little skill it takes to hack blackboard have no idea how to hack at all. Me being one of them, I openly admit I have no hacking experience. Even if Blackboard has very weak security protocols, stop posting on the internet acting like your some kind of hotshot hacker prodigy
Back when I was at school, they used macs and the security was absolutely terrible.
With my student account I launched a terminal and typed 'passwd root'.
Instead of telling me I'm not allowed to do that, it asked for a new password.
Long story short, I had root access and an elevated student account on most of the macs.
(This is actually a TRUE story)
I am an educator. I don't work in K-12, though, and your story is a big part of why.
Take a cruise around a university education department sometime. You will find some of the dumbest people you've ever had the misfortune to meet (usually not the profs--the students).
And we wonder why our schools can't produce good results... Ugh.
Morons.
"But the 3.6.2 update was ALREADY released WELL BEFORE the story was posted (Tuesday March 23, @02:51AM Eastern): https://developer.mozilla.org/devnews/index.php/2010/03/22/firefox-3-6-2-update-now-available-as-free-download/ Firefox 3.6.2 update now available as free download Version 3.6.2 was released THE DAY BEFORE this story even posted! Once again you are caught in your BOLD-FACED LIES, LOL! - by clone53421 (1310749) on Monday April 05, @01:36PM (#31736454) Journal
FireFox turned up YET ANOTHER SECURITY BUG & right when you shot your big libellous mouth off in that quote above on 04/05/2010 above, taken from here:
----
Mozilla Firefox DOM Node Moving Use-After-Free Vulnerability:
http://secunia.com/advisories/39175/
Release Date 2010-04-02
Last Update 2010-04-06
----
http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1591778&cid=31755996
That's where you quote above is from, and, Where Germany advised its peoples to stay away from FireFox, as they had for IE before that (but, never for Opera).
(Thus, yet another security bug surfaced in FireFox 3.6.2 in that time frame, yet again, 2x that week it appears (LOL!)).
Clone - How stupid do you feel after that quoted rant of yours above that opens this posting of mine in reply?
Now everyone here will see how stupid you are, repeatedly, in all of your posts... lol!
Clone - tell us, what came out the next day after you posted your crap I quoted above, Clone the CLOWN, you utter dimwit?
FireFox 3.6.3!
Why?? Because YET ANOTHER SECURITY VULNERABILITY SURFACED THAT DAY OR THE NEXT DAY in FIREFOX, YET AGAIN, lmao...
"too, Too, TOO EASY!"
Obviously clone the clown, you lost yet again, and you obviously have done nothing with your wasted life, based on such a stupid mistake on your part above CLOWN. Obviously, You're too stupid to exist CLOWN, and it's no small wonder that all you do is post on slashdot all day, as you don't have enough skills or degrees necessary to your name in computing to actually have or hold a job in the sciences of computing.
We used to use some crappy OS8 program that has us do times tables and other boring stuff. Afterwards we were allowed to play games on said computers.
When you finished the times tables and stuff, a prompt came up with a score. The teacher had to come and record the score in their gradebook, then enter a password to allow us to continue.
The teacher was pretty good about hiding her keystrokes from what she must have sensed was an intelligent, rebellious youth.
I only managed to get the first couple letters of her password, which matched up with the name of the family who had donated the apples. I tried that as the password, and succeeded.
It took a few weeks until the teacher noticed I was not calling her over, then they figured out what had happened.
I got a stern talking to in the principal's office, and I think I lost recess for a few days. This is the same district that in high school would suspend five students and ban them from prom for writing "Class of 20XX" in washable paint on a glass skylight, so this is doubly surprising in retrospect.
Well, America is a free country.
We are a free people.
No joke
http://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/bs2n5/so_you_mean_to_tell_me_you_were_able_to_see_parts/