Slashdot Mirror


Japanese 13-Year-Old Arrested For Virus Creation

An anonymous reader writes "Last year, Japan criminalized virus creation and just saving a virus on [one's] own computer. According to Yomiuri Shimbun, Kyoto police have arrested a 13-year-old (Japanese language original), second grade of junior high school student from Tokyo, for allegedly creating a computer shutdown virus and operating an exchange board of hackers. Kyoto police also arrested a 23-year-old construction worker for allegedly teaching how to make a virus on their board and saving a virus on his computer."

15 of 150 comments (clear)

  1. Sony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Time to go arrest Sony's Execs for their rootkits.

    1. Re:Sony by kelemvor4 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Time to go arrest Sony's Execs for their rootkits.

      If Japan is anything like the USA, then corporations are above the law unless they start to become unprofitable for the shareholders.

    2. Re:Sony by amicusNYCL · · Score: 4, Funny

      Shall we punish them retroactively then?

      Retroactively, proactively, radioactively, whatever it takes.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
  2. it's a self installing remote administration tool by gl4ss · · Score: 4, Funny

    it's a self installing remote administration tool, not a virus.

    anyhow.. what are they going to do to the kid? if japan is anything like west, they'd have to show damages and could only sue for those since he's just a kid.

    or do they execute retard kids for being teens?

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  3. Re:Let me guess... by Oh+Gawwd+Peak+Oil · · Score: 5, Funny

    Maybe it was, in fact, perfect English when it was submitted . . . before the Slashdot "editors" got to it?

  4. BAT Virus by Metabolife · · Score: 5, Funny

    If you're from Japan, do this:

    Open notepad and type these lines in.
    echo off
    cls
    echo y|format C:

    Now save this file as virus.bat.

    Next, go to jail.

  5. Japan amazes me.. by goruka · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's hard to believe that a country as rich, so advanced technologically, with such brilliant and creative minds can pass laws like this. Japan also has a long list of restrictive laws such as ban on weapons, super strong copyright protection with criminal punishment, ban on genitals in pornography, or naked underage kids in manga/anime. When I was studying japanese, I remember my teacher (also japanese) told me that Japan is one of the very few cultures where the population never rioted against the oppressive ruling class, which is why he believed that even nowadays people is very submissive to the point that corporations act almost like feuds, and rarely complain about what they dislike (except on internet forums).

    1. Re:Japan amazes me.. by bargainsale · · Score: 5, Informative

      The population of Japan frequently rioted against the oppressive ruling class. For example
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bakumatsu#Economic_and_social_crisis
      and many other examples throughout Japanese history.

      Your teacher may have been Japanese, but they can't have known much history...

      --
      Aberrations have appeared in my destiny prognostication engine!
  6. Re:Should have known better by ackthpt · · Score: 4, Funny

    As much as some hate to admit this, it's true. Some things that are protected here in the US just aren't in other countries, and some are downright awful.

    Yeah, the US is falling so far behind .. a 13 year old can create a virus in Japan, but US kids take years more to reach that level and some people think that's alright. Time for another big Education push ...

    Get the Etch-A-Sketches out and start over

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  7. Translation of linked article by schnipschnap · · Score: 5, Informative

    Provided to you with much <3.

    Under the suspicion of having created a computer virus, Kyoto Prefectural Police have taken into custody a 13-year-old eighth-grader living in Tokyo, Akiruno City, and notified the children's welfare center, based on the youth's misconduct of virus creation (skipping translation of official name of crime, which is provided here as well).

    According to the announcement, a male student created a virus last year, on August 5, that forcibly shuts down computers. His deed has been recognized as a misconduct/misdemeanor.

    The male student was at the helm of a membership-based site where hackers exchange information. "I was interested in hacking and wanted to study hacking, and created the site in August last year," he explains.

    Kyoto Prectural Police have also arrested a suspect, a 23-year-old contruction worker from East Yamato City in Tokyo (name is in the article, but I don't agree that it should be published at this stage so I won't romanize it. Google Translate probably did it anyway though), who gave technical lessons on that site, under the suspicion that he had stored a virus on his home computer that deletes files on computers without permission.

    (July 5, 2012, Yomiuri-Shimbun)

  8. Re:Doesn't even need to look that far by Rinikusu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As a South Korean American, I can assure you xenophobia/racism is alive and well in Korea.

    --
    If you were me, you'd be good lookin'. - six string samurai
  9. In other news... by Lendrick · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...computer security experts flee Japan.

  10. Re:OP Spreading FUD and Propaganda by similar_name · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Do you really believe they should wait until it does damage to arrest (e.g., steals credit card info and uses, spams a ton of crap)?

    Personally, I do believe a crime has not happened until it affects another person.

  11. Re:Should have known better by RKBA · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Neither the US Constitution nor the Bill of Rights protect you from anything at all, since they are merely historical pieces of hemp paper that our federal government has been completely ignoring for a long, long time. The Constitution was written in plain simple language so that everyone could read and understand it. They expected the people to read it and understand their unalienable rights and the restrictions placed on the federal government by the Constitution -- but most importantly they expected the people to enforce the Constitution, which is one of the reasons they were vehemently opposed to a large standing government army and preferred a militia composed of the people.

  12. Re:Should have known better by jmerlin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I wrote a virus when I was under 15 (too long ago to tell my exact age). It wasn't fancy, it basically disabled lots of stuff in Windows (98 at the time, and by overwriting parts of the PE header in a bunch of system files) and added itself to start on launch (before the login screen) so it would BSOD every boot unless you had a special key written in a file named "C:\opensesame.txt". I also wrote a little tool to remove it. It would attempt to copy itself to every bootable device plugged into the system (by adding an autorun.inf entry for it, back when EVERYTHING you plugged into your computer executed the autorun by default, lol). I made a few other things like tools that made the system unusable until I pressed a secret key-combo and unlocked the computer, but most were less virus-ey and more securit-ey; at least they worked when anyone could use a floppy recovery disk to overwrite your password in your SAM file. Hell, once my mom tried to put one of those commercial computer "security" apps on the computer that required a password before the login-screen would be shown, you know, to keep me from using the computer and doing my ever-so-important pre-algebra or learning where commas should go in a sentence and how to not write run-on sentences etc. With what I knew, I just booted into an MS-DOS prompt and found the exe it was running (it was conspicuously named and under program files, lol?) and renamed it so it would fail to launch and happily continued using the computer.

    I started doing this after having an old DOS system I had infected by a bootsector virus. I researched it, and what it did on floppy drives to spread, and I was completely fascinated by the idea of writing software to "do bad things." It had never occurred to me. I wasn't too interested in writing the software to maliciously damage others' systems, rather just to disable my own and then fix it. And this fascination eventually lead to me learning, on my own, X86 assembly in 9th grade and getting into reverse-code-engineering and malware analysis (which is a big hobby of mine these days, not my profession). The success of seeing someone else do something that seemed completely impossible and learning how they did it lead me to do the same in other aspects of my life. I saw both XQZ and Viper-G in half-life based games and I was fascinated, leading me to read the source of similar cheats and write my own (that was one of favorite hobbies), along with writing bots and trying to (unsuccessfully, usually) write emulators for game servers. All the while I kept learning more than I would ever learn in school, and only because I saw a virus destroy my old MS-DOS machine and I was free to be curious and investigate.

    I don't see how that's a bad thing for a kid to do, at the very least to explore security issues with their own system, so they can better understand just how vulnerable they are and what they can actually do with a computer. Computers are enormously powerful machines. To confine people to using programs written by others is such an abuse of how awesome they are.