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UK Tabloids Doxxed the 'Hero' Hacker Who Stopped a Global Cyberattack (theoutline.com)

The UK-based security researcher, who "accidentally" halted the spread of the ransomware Wanna Decryptor over the weekend, has been doxxed by UK tabloids. From a report: [...] Journalists have published his name against his will, bringing him unwanted attention and sending a signal to privacy-sensitive researchers that no good deed goes unpunished. The researcher, writing under the username MalwareTechBlog, published a blog post on his personal site with findings about the virus, explaining how it was stopped and what would have to be done to prevent it from coming back. News outlets, including the Daily Mail, The Guardian, and CNN called the anonymous researcher a hero. The researcher was initially responsive to press inquiries. He told reporters that he was 22, lived in the south of England with his parents, and worked for an L.A. security firm. However, he told The Guardian that he wanted to remain anonymous "because it just doesn't make sense to give out my personal information, obviously we're working against bad guys and they're not going to be happy about this." It took about a day for UK papers, including The Mail, The Sun, The Telegraph, and The Mirror, to suss out the researcher's name and publish photos of him, show up at his house, and track down his friends and associates for interviews. "It's caused a fair bit of stress," he told Forbes. "I don't want fame."

16 of 164 comments (clear)

  1. The media really is terrible by hsmith · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They don't care what gets in their way as long as it leads to a "juicy story" and will ruin every life in the way to get it. Reporters, well anyone employed at these garbage "papers" are vile disgusting people.

    It isn't really "fake news" as Orange Jesus would say, just garbage news.

  2. Transparancy by Avarist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Those tabloids are a sore on humanity but we must remember, they exist because it works, because people fall for the clickbait. Tackle the cause not the symptom.

    --
    In Capitalist US, the commerce controls the Government.
    1. Re:Transparancy by drinkypoo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Er... how exactly do we tackle the cause, which as you said is human nature?

      With education. When I was in jr. high I had an English teacher who cared enough to teach us about techniques of propaganda. This sort of thing (along with, you know, basic logic — the only place I got any of that was in GATE) should be an explicit part of the curriculum. Instead we got No Child Left Behind, which leaves teachers no time for that kind of jazz. They have to teach to the tests, and have no time for anything else. (I guess now we have Every Student Succeeds instead, and I haven't heard as much about that, so perhaps it's somewhat less evil.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  3. Good work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not you, UK tabloids. But the /. editor who removed the guy's name from the summary. The issue at stake is newsworthy to Slashdot reader, but at the end, the name of the person isn't.

  4. Re:F*ck the Pressitutes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Are you dense? Legitimate news sources protected his name. It's the tabloids that went after him.

    Liberals respect privacy, by the way. You're thinking of the far right that respects money over human rights.

  5. Re:F*ck the Pressitutes by jhoegl · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You realize tabloids are not news outlets, correct? I find your post hate filled and derogatory towards a specific political leaning. Which may explain your inability to differentiate news from fake news.

  6. Irresponsible and possibly dangerous by bjdevil66 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Good press: Exposing bad actors in a conspiracy that are trying to remain anonymous.

    Bad press: Exposing an accidental good actor that specifically asked to remain anonymous so he could do his work.

    This was like outing a police officer's name and address after he nails a low-level gang leader. It could get very messy for this 22 year old online. Hacked social media accounts, DDOSed any personally managed online resources (web servers, etc.). And that's if it's a low-level script kiddie type trying to make some cash - and not some more malevolent group.

    Celebrity isn't what you want in that line of work...

    1. Re:Irresponsible and possibly dangerous by h4ck7h3p14n37 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If he really wanted to remain anonymous then he should have kept his mouth shut instead of posting on a personal blog and then giving interviews to the media.

      You can't really complain about people figuring out who you. If you want to stay anonymous, then stay anonymous!

      He clearly wanted the attention, he just wants to control how much attention he gets which isn't up to him.

    2. Re:Irresponsible and possibly dangerous by tlhIngan · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It could get very messy for this 22 year old online. Hacked social media accounts, DDOSed any personally managed online resources (web servers, etc.). And that's if it's a low-level script kiddie type trying to make some cash - and not some more malevolent group.

      Online is the least of his troubles. He will have problems offline

      You think malware groups are above harassment, robbery and/or thuggery? Hell, if the value is high enough, you can add attempted murder to the list. They are criminal organizations and they will not stoop to trying to get anyone hurting their business eradicated.

      At the very least, he should get those tabloids to pay for his moving costs and for a new house.

    3. Re:Irresponsible and possibly dangerous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So, if you say anything online at all, you have no right to complain if you get doxxed? Think through what you're saying, here.

  7. Re:F*ck the Pressitutes by Holi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Liberal? You mean the Daily Mail, the Telegraph, and the Sun? Those paragons a the liberal ideology?? (hint, I am being a tad bit sarcastic here).

    Think this might go a bit beyond progressive/conservative ideology.

    Might have more to do with Britain's complete and utter lack of respect of personal privacy. Sorry Brit's you let it happen after the IRA attacks, camera's everywhere, and now the idea of an expectation of privacy is a myth in your country.

    --
    Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
  8. Re:F*ck the Pressitutes by Headw1nd · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Reductive vitriol like this accomplishes nothing. There is a world of difference between sleazy tabloids and the serious journalism, you can't use the actions of one to judge the other. Your comment makes as much sense as using the fact someone coded the virus as a reason to talk shit about CS majors and programming in general.

  9. Re:F*ck the Pressitutes by Holi · · Score: 1, Insightful

    How are tabloids not media outlets?

    Stop equating media with news. News is a subset of the media, but then again so are the Simpsons.

    --
    Sorry, teleporters just kill you and then make a copy. A perfect, soul-less copy.
  10. Re:This is the real reason he is upset by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yes, I don't know.

    It doesn't matter. Small minds discuss people.

    Discuss the event. Any event. The infection event: IoT is shit/not shit. The morality event: Vigilante hero or illegal haxor criminal. The exposure event: Shitty journalism is blah blah blah.

    Who gives a fuck about whether Some Guy is living with his mom, unless he's being proposed or considered somehow, making his viability the event.

  11. Re: F*ck the Pressitutes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I apologize ahead of time if you're just being sarcastic ... whoosh on me. But, liberals most certainly do NOT respect privacy. They would love nothing less than to post running lists of personal info for legal gun owners, advocates of traditional marriage, pro-lifers and creationists in teaching positions, engineering and/or with PhDs.

  12. he should sue them, assuming he lives... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Those tabloids put him in harms way in the middle of a global IT security crisis.

    When (not if) people in hospitals die because of this computer hacking, they should sue those tabloids, for putting a target on his head, and on the head of anyone who wanted to help. Bet your arse that there are others who will "just duck" to not get doxxed by those sorts of papers.

    I think anyone whose life he saved, should help crowdfund a lawsuit against the papers that did this.

    If he ends up being executed for this, I think that the state (is it UK?) should sue those agencies on his behalf for his wrongful death in which they were enabling participants.