Student Hacker Faces 10 Years in Prison For Spyware That Hit 16,000 Computers (vice.com)
An anonymous reader quotes Motherboard:
A 21-year-old from Virginia plead guilty on Friday to writing and selling custom spyware designed to monitor a victim's keystrokes. Zachary Shames, from Great Falls, Virginia, wrote a keylogger, malware designed to record every keystroke on a computer, and sold it to more than 3,000 people who infected more than 16,000 victims with it, according to a press release from the U.S. Department of Justice.
Shames, who appears to be a student at James Madison University, developed the first version of the spyware while he was still a high school student in 2013, "and continued to modify and market the illegal product from his college dorm room," according to the feds... While the feds only vaguely referred to it as "some malicious keylogger software," it appears the spyware was actually called "Limitless Keylogger Pro," according to evidence found by a security researcher who asked to remain anonymous... According to what appears to be Shames Linkedin page, he was an intern for the defense contractor Northrop Grumman from May 2015 until August 2016.
The Department of Justice announced that he'll be sentenced on June 16, and faces a maximum of 10 years in prison.
Shames, who appears to be a student at James Madison University, developed the first version of the spyware while he was still a high school student in 2013, "and continued to modify and market the illegal product from his college dorm room," according to the feds... While the feds only vaguely referred to it as "some malicious keylogger software," it appears the spyware was actually called "Limitless Keylogger Pro," according to evidence found by a security researcher who asked to remain anonymous... According to what appears to be Shames Linkedin page, he was an intern for the defense contractor Northrop Grumman from May 2015 until August 2016.
The Department of Justice announced that he'll be sentenced on June 16, and faces a maximum of 10 years in prison.
Same AC as the GP. Please educate yourself on what the keylogger actually does: link to research paper.
Among other things, Limitless was designed to steal saved passwords in a number of applications, deny browser access to certain websites, and force logins to Steam. The behavior seems like malware to me.
Good point. Selling guns to criminals and terrorists should also be legal since you aren't actually pulling the trigger.
Oh, wait. It is legal.
Your a stupid cunt... and your post proves it. If you lie about your identity on a background check, that's illegal. If you use a strawman to purchase your gun, illegal. If you lie on the NICS form, illegal.
So after breaking at least ONE of those laws to get through the background check.. you know, the system where the GOVERNMENT says its OK for you to buy a gun, how is the gun shop liable?
Stupid cunt is stupid.