Security Researchers Threatened With US Cybercrime Laws
An anonymous reader writes "The Guardian reports that many of the security industry's top researchers are being threatened by lawyers and law enforcement over their efforts to track down vulnerabilities in internet infrastructure. 'HD Moore, creator of the ethical hacking tool Metasploit and chief research officer of security consultancy Rapid7, told the Guardian he had been warned by U.S. law enforcement last year over a scanning project called Critical.IO, which he started in 2012. The initiative sought to find widespread vulnerabilities using automated computer programs to uncover the weaknesses across the entire internet. ... Zach Lanier, senior security researcher at Duo Security, said many of his team had "run into possible CFAA issues before in the course of research over the last decade." Lanier said that after finding severe vulnerabilities in an unnamed "embedded device marketed towards children" and reporting them to the manufacturer, he received calls from lawyers threatening him with action."
...when ill thought out laws are passed.
In the UK, it is a crime (under the computer misuse act) to test a 3rd party system for vulnerabilities.
The Heartbleed incident caused a lot of people to break the law testing whether websites were affected.
The NSA and other security services will not want security researchers to find and fix vulnerabilities the security services are exploiting.
Not "caught hacking", this implies you know about the problem or had a way to detect this post-fact. Most of the times it is "hey you have a problem" followed by OMGLAWYERS idiotic response. Last time I checked lawyers were rather ineffective at patching vulnerabilities, doing root cause analysis, or improving your organization's security posture and/or practices.
So you should have to be invited to test to ensure that the systems are secure from exploits? Under that philosophy the black hats will win almost every time.
When you cant win, ad hominem.
They're very effective. To paraphrase Futurama:
Documentary Narrator: Fortunately, our most expensive lawyers sued the security researchers and shut them up. Of course, the security holes are still there, we just sue anyone who talks about them. Thus solving the problem once and for all.
Suzie: But...
Documentary Narrator: Once and for all!
Sadly, too many companies don't see this as a joke, but as a valid security vulnerability response strategy.
My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
That's a really bad analogy.
It is. It's more like the wet napkin has retained an imprint of the credit card and you have left the napkin behind on the bar. Someone then takes the napkin, hands it to you and says "you want to be careful with these wet napkins, look". You call the police because someone you don't know has your credit card details.