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Would-Be Akamai Spy Busted By Feds

itwbennett writes "Elliot Doxer, an Akamai Technologies staffer, was charged on Wednesday with wire fraud. The case began in June 2006 when Doxer sent an e-mail to the consulate of a foreign country (referred to as 'country X') in which he 'expressed his desire to help that country with whatever information he could obtain in his position,' according to an article on ITworld. 'The foreign consulate that Doxer contacted turned his e-mail over to law enforcement authorities, and a little over a year later, he was contacted by an FBI agent posing as a representative of 'country X.' Over the next 18 months, Doxer left confidential business information such as customer lists and contracts at a designated spot called a dead drop, acts captured via video surveillance.'"

18 of 171 comments (clear)

  1. Re:An Analog 'Dead Drop'? by gstoddart · · Score: 3, Funny

    An Akamai employee is using an analog dead drop? Surely he could have set up some sort of digital delivery served up by his employer, no?

    It made him feel more like a secret agent, so they humored him. His handlers did have to tell him not to wear the mask and cape, though. It was creeping out the locals.

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  2. Re:An Analog 'Dead Drop'? by ptbarnett · · Score: 4, Informative

    It made him feel more like a secret agent, so they humored him.

    It doesn't look like espionage was his goal. From the article:

    He also seemed preoccupied with ill will toward his ex-wife, writing at one point that "not enough bad things can happen to her if you know what I mean." And he offered to drop his request for monetary compensation in return for information or pictures of his son.

    It sounds like it was more about retribution. His ex-wife apparently disappeared in "Country X" with their son.

  3. Israel? by zerro · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.jta.org/news/article/2010/10/07/2741170/jewish-internet-company-employee-arrested-for-selling-secrets Jewish Internet company employee arrested for selling secrets October 7, 2010 (JTA) -- A Jewish employee of a Boston-area Internet company was arrested on suspicion of selling confidential information to a foreign company. Elliot Doxer, 42, who works in the finance department of Akamai Technologies Inc., was charged Wednesday with wire fraud for providing confidential business information to an undercover FBI agent that he believed was a foreign government agent. The information included contract details, employee information and customer lists. The country was identified in the indictment as Country X. "I am a Jewish American who lives in Boston," Doxer reportedly wrote in an e-mail to a foreign country's consulate in Boston. "I know you are always looking for information and I am offering the little I may have." Doxer, who had access to invoices and customer contact information, also said in a later message that his goal was "to help our homeland and our war against our enemies." He informed the agent that his company served the U.S. Department of Defense, Airbus and several Arab companies. Doxer reportedly asked for $3,000 in compensation for his actions. According to the complaint, Doxer provided the agent with a list of Akamai's customers, several contracts and a list of employees and their contact information. Doxer and the agent first made contact in September 2007.

    1. Re:Israel? by VJ42 · · Score: 3, Informative

      Israel?

      Yes: Here's another Source that indicates Israel: http://www.jpost.com/International/Article.aspx?id=190523

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    2. Re:Israel? by MysteriousPreacher · · Score: 3, Informative

      It seems plausible.

      http://www.searchboston.com/boston_directory/Gov/Foreign_Consulates_in_Boston/

      Australia - Consulate Boston
      Austria - Consulate Boston
      Canada - Consulate Boston
      Germany - Consulate Boston
      Hungary - Consulate Boston
      Israel - Consulate Boston
      Mexico - Consulate Boston
      Norway - Consulate Boston
      Portugal - Consulate Boston
      Sweden - Consulate Boston
      Venezuela - Consulate Boston

      Israel would seem the more likely option, and certainly a country to engender the "homeland" feeling.

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  4. Re:Entrapment by ShadowRangerRIT · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Entrapment would be if the FBI offered him money to divulge company secrets out of the blue. He made an offer to Country X; the intent to commit a crime was his alone, not prompted by law enforcement.

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  5. Re:Entrapment by tomkost · · Score: 3, Informative

    No, entrapment would be if the FBI came to you (posing as a foreign power) out of the blue to ask if you would share secret info and then you did. e.g. they enticed or entrapped you into doing it. In this case, the guy initiated the action all on his own. The FBI in this case was just proving that the guy really wanted to do this, not just making an offer that he never intended to follow through with. From wikipedia: Government agents entrapped him if three conditions are fulfilled: 1. The idea for committing the crime came from the government agents and not from the person accused of the crime. 2. Government agents then persuaded or talked the person into committing the crime. Simply giving him the opportunity to commit the crime is not the same as persuading him to commit the crime. 3. The person was not ready and willing to commit the crime before the government agents spoke with him. On the issue of entrapment, the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was not entrapped by government agents.

  6. Re:for those who wonder what the hell akamai might by maotx · · Score: 4, Informative

    More specifically, Akamai is a content distribution company that serves as a local mirror for it's customers and their customer's clients. You'll see them everywhere from streaming video at Yahoo! to deploying Windows Updates with Microsoft. You would be surprised with how much content is delivered to your computer from their servers.

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  7. Re:An Analog 'Dead Drop'? by afidel · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As someone who has a family member who lost their child to international kidnapping I have to say I feel for the guy. There's really nothing worse than having your child ripped from you and being physically separated with little hope of ever seeing them again.

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  8. Re:What kind of moron by Bill+Wong · · Score: 4, Informative

    Country X in this case is Israel. Doxer identified himself as jewish when he tried to set this up in the first place. (source)

  9. Re:for those who wonder what the hell akamai might by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm sure I'm getting part of this wrong, because it's been about ten years since I sat through a presentation by an Akamai dude in the waning dot-com days, but their main offering was a sort of content caching/mirroring system with servers all over the place to back it up.

    So for example, you're Fox and you sign up to have your streaming TV episodes "Akamaized". The day after a new episode of American Idol is posted to the web, probably a lot of people are downloading/streaming it. Akamai's setup would automatically mirror it out to a bunch of local servers all over the place, so in theory, no matter where you the watcher are, you're streaming from a server a low number of hops/latency from you, and you're not slashdotting Fox's own servers.

  10. Re:What kind of moron by MozeeToby · · Score: 3, Interesting

    China is hardly the only country guilty of this. I've heard more stories from co-workers about issues in France than anywhere else, to the point that it is against company policy to take a company issue laptop there. And I don't mean random guy approaches you in the bar and asks what you do for a living, I mean coming back from dinner to find 3 suits and 2 uniformed cops in your hotel room that all refuse to tell you what they were doing there.

  11. Aside from just being a dumbass... by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This guy's second mistake (after thinking he was capable of any espionage at all) was to approach a foreign consulate. This isn't the 1940s anymore people. Consulates are not the hotbeds of espionage that they used to be. If he wanted to be an agent for a foreign intelligence organization, he should have tried to contact them directly in a manner not easily intercepted by SIGINT such as an old fashioned letter (or even better, contact them through a sympathetic radical political organization). Don't think that a nation's State Department or Ministry of Foreign Affairs is going to have time or interest in your petty cloak and dagger.

    (The previous is no more than commentary and opinion and should not be construed as encouragement or advice to commit treason/fraud/etc.)

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  12. Re:Think of it in Reverse by Migraineman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's value in making a very public example of folks like this. Consulates don't want to be bothered with Joe Everyman and his get-rich-quick scheme.

    Besides, this could easily be a test of loyalty from a friendly nation. You wouldn't want to damage decades of political negotiations over a penny-ante commercial information leak.

  13. Re:Entrapment by rthille · · Score: 5, Funny

    "If a LEO approaches me and offers to murder my estranged ex-wife for $20,000 that's entrapment."

    No, that's a bargain!

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  14. Re:An Analog 'Dead Drop'? by dwillden · · Score: 5, Informative

    This is/was an attempt at industrial espionage, NOT TREASON. Big difference, this one the worst he will face is the potential of a few years in prison. And in fact he's only being charged with Wire Fraud.

    Treason can (very unlikely) face the death penalty.

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  15. Re:Think of it in Reverse by vxice · · Score: 3, Informative

    Israel can't possibly endanger its relationship with the U.S. Look up the USS LIberty or if that is not bad enough look up the Levon affair of 1954 where Israel failed to attack British and American interests in an attempt to blame it on random terrorists creating a situation that would require the U.S. to stay in the Sinai.

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  16. Re:An Analog 'Dead Drop'? by Binestar · · Score: 3, Informative

    Treason is *VERY* far away. Constitutional amendment far. http://www.lectlaw.com/def2/t103.htm

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