Slashdot Mirror


Ikatako Virus Replaces Victims' Files With Pictures of Squid

An anonymous reader writes "Ikatako is a virus that spreads through Japanese P2P network Winny, aided by the pirates' lack of wit. Once downloaded and run, the virus sends their data to a central server and replaces it with cephalopod and cnidarian imagery. Japanese hacker (and virus creator) Masato Nakatsuji thought he wouldn't be arrested this time. However, Japanese police considered the files in Japanese pirates' hard drives to be more important than his manga depictions of octopods and other tentacled fauna."

20 of 105 comments (clear)

  1. cephalopods are no crime by Trepidity · · Score: 3, Funny

    Screw Japan, free cephalopods!

  2. squid pro quo by maweki · · Score: 5, Funny

    squid pro quo

    1. Re:squid pro quo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      he programmed in octal

  3. Ikatako Virus Replaces Victims' Files With Picture by omar.sahal · · Score: 3, Insightful

    he felt he would not be arrested again because he had created the manga images for Ikatako himself, therefore avoiding a violation of the copyright law.

    If one of the motivations for such people to hack others computers is to prove how smart they are, this is epic fail.
    Perhaps we need to just take the micky out people like this so at least younger kids don't see hacking others computers as a very smart thing to do.

  4. No pics? by ChrisK87 · · Score: 3, Funny

    The quality of this alleged cephalopod manga is clearly relevant to how serious a crime this is. We need to see these pictures before we can make a judgment.

  5. Tentacle P...ictures? by tnok85 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Can you imagine the shock when you open your porn folder to find it's all tentacles... err, I mean, can you imagine the shock when somebody who doesn't post on /. opens their porn folder to find it's all tentacles?

    1. Re:Tentacle P...ictures? by symes · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I see you are schooled in the art of octoporn - considered a delicacy in some countries. From the Urban Dictionary:

      Octoporn: Pornography that depicts an, in fact, real octopus being ejected from a human orifice. The act is classically accompanied by a copious amount of unappetizing muscular contractions. The resulting ejection is considered a delicacy in at least nine countries.

  6. Re:"Your Rights Online"? by deep9x · · Score: 5, Informative

    Well, in TFA it mentions it's the first time that anyone in Japan has been charged with "property destruction" for creating a virus. Also, he created all the images himself so he wouldn't get arrested for copyright infringement. Of course, none of this is made clear in the summary, and I think the latter point is more him being a smartass. I thought maybe he was a mis-aimed White Hat, but no, he was collecting the data from the affected computers as well and just hanging onto it. So, I guess that falls under YRO as a general "computer law" issue, but it's kind of an unnecessary story since it's just a guy getting arrested for making a virus. How original!

  7. It was probably a paid hit by BlindRobin · · Score: 3, Funny

    I suspect that P.Z. Myers hired him or one of his minions of the Pharyngula hoard

  8. Re:"Your Rights Online"? by ChrisK87 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Perhaps it's because one of "your rights online" is "to not have your files arbitrarily replaced with octopus manga".

  9. Re:"Your Rights Online"? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't think /. editors should decide on beforehand what I think is right/wrong. This is related to internet laws so it fits in the YRO category.

  10. worthless without pics by roman_mir · · Score: 4, Funny

    insane, they TALK about an image in this so called story instead of displaying it!

    Ok, here are some pictures to make the story worth the 5 minutes /. is going to waste on it.

  11. But echinoderms are(was: cephalopods are no crime) by ralfmuschall · · Score: 3, Funny

    True, but he also installed also pics of sea urchins, who are the enemy in the Great Invertebrate War.

  12. Cephalapod fetish hacker scooped in police dragnet by qwerty8ytrewq · · Score: 4, Funny

    Everything was going swimmingly until he got hooked, line and sinker by the police who smelt something fishy. I wonder if he was acting on behalf of Sid The Squida thieving octopus who was released early last year from NZ.

    --
    Waiting for the other shoe to...
  13. Submitter: stop trying to be clever by synthesizerpatel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You manage to obscure the actual content of the story by misdirection and lack of information.

    I realize the motivation behind writing 'teaser' articles -- get people to read the full article rather than just the summary.

    But it ends up being like Network News

    "7 things in your pantry that can give you EBOLA... coming up after these commercials!"

    Please stop.

    1. Re:Submitter: stop trying to be clever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Thanks, I am glad you enjoyed it. Next time blame the editors who chose to publish it without my witty title... ... and the sentence explaining that he was charged with destruction of "property".

      What's amazing about this case is that the "victims" were actually violating the Japanese law by downloading copyrighted files, while Nakatsuji is not, but the Police has something against "virus" writers and uses whatever unconstitutional and illegal way they can think of to bust them.

      Other than that, the summary depicts the facts pretty well, and got itself published. Next time I might get a Pulitzer.

      RTFA.

      Signed,
      Anonymous Coward.

  14. Re:cephalopod hentai? by prash_n_rao · · Score: 5, Informative
    --
    This is not my sig.
  15. FYI: Strange sense of pursuit of quality by tai · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just FYI, many Japanese geeks were amazed by his "pursuit of quality" shown on Japanese TV news.

    [WASTE OF TALENT] On "Excessive quality" of Ika-Tako virus's illustration and character background.
    - http://zeark969.blog38.fc2.com/blog-entry-1668.html

    Althrough page above is in Japanese, I'd say a picture is worth a thousand words.

  16. This is the Japanese police's fault by erroneus · · Score: 3, Interesting

    They charged him somewhat improperly the first time and so the criminal was confused about what his REAL crime was.

    Dealing with Japanese people frequently, I encounter similar communications problems in that the most important issues aren't mentioned often enough. Quite frequently, they only mention one reason or one problem or one symptom. For whatever reason, they feel no need to add more for completeness or accuracy. It is interesting to see that they not only do this to me, but they do it to themselves as well. So they charge him the first time on copyright infringement. Naturally, he believes that is the extent of what he did wrong the first time since there was no mention of other crimes in his original charges. So, he does it again...

    The first time I encountered this strange behavior, it was with a Japanese girlfriend. If I asked her to do something and she didn't want to, she would offer a reason why not. And after addressing the concern, she would come up with another reason why not. Eventually, I would get to the core reason(s) why not, but only after persistently digging into the issue. At first, I thought it was just her. But after working with Japanese people extensively, I have found that this is rather common. So when dealing with Japanese users, they might offer up a single problem or symptom omitting any additional information. Naturally, I either assume the problem is one thing that it is not based on the absence of important symptoms described or that it is a new issue not yet encountered before. I know these people are not stupid. But I remain mystified as to how this peculiarity of communication has come to be.

    While I recognize that Japanese culture and communications are strongly tied to context and general assumption of knowledge and understanding, it would seem they are so accustomed to that level of incompleteness of expression that it is simply so engrained into their thinking that it is applied to everything. Often I wonder why so many of their TV shows contain subtitles, but this goes a long way to explaining why.

    In any case, I believe this is a clear case of them doing it to themselves this time! "Oh! So I was arrested for copyright infringement! Okay, so next time I will draw my own pictures and it won't be a problem!" Lovely. Cultural inbreeding....

  17. Re:cephalopod hentai? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I had no idea tentacle porn was so old.

    We are doomed.

    You backwards Western barbarian, while your ancestors were still painting themselves blue and living in caves, sexual perversion was already running rampant in Asian societies .