Hacker Shows How To Fabricate Death Records
wiredmikey writes: Hackers the Def Con gathering in Las Vegas on Friday got schooled in how to be online "killers." A rush to go digital with the process of registering deaths has made it simple for maliciously minded folks to have someone who is alive declared dead by the authorities. The process of having someone officially stamped dead by getting a death certificate issued typically involves a doctor filling out one form and a funeral home filling out another, according to Rock's research. Once forms are submitted online, certificates declaring the listed person legally dead are generated. A fatal flaw in the system is that people can easily pose as real doctors and funeral directors.
He also showed how to create birth certificates.
There are a number of potential exploits here. One would be to create birth certificates for two fake children, get some credit cards, max them out buying the same stock (one shorting the stock, one long). Whichever makes money, you keep. The other one, you get a fake death certificate, then you don't have to pay.
Of course, all this is fraud, and you can be arrested for it if you get caught.
"First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
Find a cooperative public servant and have them declare someone dead.
It's a lot easier than you think it is.
Particularly if you find someone in the police or otherwise having access to police records, all you have to do is fabricate a missing persons report older than 2556 days (7 years), leave it open, and the High Court will issue a presumption of death hence authorising the issuance of a death certificate with no proof of death (ie a body) required.
(EW 2013 C. 13 Section 2)
Then you don't just fuck up their credit score, you wipe their entire digital fingerprint.
Political debates have me rolling my eyes so much I think I got optical whiplash. I should sue. - Foamy The Squirrel
Funny, the first thing that came to my mind was having my ex-wife declared dead. To each his own, I guess.
While declaring presidential candidates dead would be fun to watch, declaring local and state candidates could be more disruptive. If a presidential
candidate died, it would be on the news all over. A candidate for alderman somewhere, not so much.
Extra virtual kids of course could appear as income tax deductions. You;d have to say they were home schooled...
I don't see a way to decently defend against this apart from having a much better way to authenticate someone's identity.
Who has to vouch for a birth though? Kid gets born in a bathroom somewhere (it does happen) and there is no physician
around. How does someone like that ever get a birth certificate? Time was relatives could vouch for someone (was common
in early 1900s). If all it takes is someone signing a piece of paper saying "this kid was born somewhere in the US on date
xx-xxx-xxxx, witness Sam nocturnal aviator" how do you know? My birth certificate has attestations but many if not all of
those folks are long dead and it's not as if there is any DNA in the paper to tie it to me.
The whole system seems to be built on sand. Maybe quicksand.
With Hillary, it's pretty self-evident:
http://jdelgado.deviantart.com...
Of course, all this is fraud, and you can be arrested for it if you get caught.
You can get arrested for retweeting someone else's comment.
If you do something they don't like (such as mounting a pistol to a drone, or putting coins in someone else's parking meter), they will find a law that can be extended to cover it.
They can use illegal means to get evidence, then use parallel construction to build a legal case. You can get arrested for anything nowadays.
I wouldn't worry about actions - law in this country has become discretionary, frivolous, and inconsistent. It's not based on harm any more.
Worry instead about getting noticed - that seems to start the process.
"First thing that comes to mind is indebted college kids using this."
The zeroth thing that comes to mind is using this as an advanced form of "swatting." Imagine how much paperwork you can cause for your victim as he tries to convince everyone that he has come back to life.
" I mean their souls are dead already so it'd only be fitting"
This is a little-known requirement for presidential candidates to get large donors.
Two docs by two different people to be dead. Seems simple enough by someone in the know. In terms of life, all I can think of is the scenes from The Shawshank Redemption. Randall Stevens was created through the mail, but one needs a birth cert, a social security number, a bank account, a driver's license. As far as I can tell, that's the minimum to live a real life here in the US. How can one hack all of the above today? A DL in NJ required "six points of ID" presented in person. So... How can one hack a new life after hacking the death of an old one?