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Security hall of shame lists winners for 2007

Security hall of shame lists winners for 2007

By:  Jaikumar Vijayan  On: 27 Dec 2007 For: Computerworld (US online) Creator

A review of the year's notable security mishaps, breaches and meltdowns feature TJX, TD Ameritrade Holding Corp., and others

Don't drop the soap: Ivory Dickerson This North Carolina native and former civil engineer was sentenced in December to 110 years in prison after admitting that he and a co-conspirator hacked into computers used by young girls and used illicitly gained data with which to terrorize them into sending lurid photos of themselves. Dickerson trolled MySpace to find underage girls in the Broward County, Fla., area. When he made contact with a potential victim (via IM or e-mail), he'd entice them into opening a file containing a Trojan program that gave him and a co-conspirator control over her computer. He would then try to use hacked information to coerce the girls into sending photos -- threatening to harm them or their families if they refused. The investigation revealed not only photos of various teenagers, but a number of bestiality photos as well, ensuring that disgust about Dickerson is shared around the food chain.

Unbirthday boy: Yung-Hsun Lin Lin, a former Unix system administrator at Medco Health Solutions Inc.'s Fair Lawn, N.J., office, pled guilty in September to planting a logic bomb that would have destroyed critical data -- including prescription drug data for individuals -- on more than 70 servers. He planted the bomb in the belief he would lose his job after Medco was spun off from drug maker Merck & Co. in 2003. The bomb was first set to go off on Lin's birthday on 2004, but when it failed to work he reset the clock for it to go off ion the same date the following year. The bomb was discovered in early January 2005, months before it was scheduled to be triggered. Lin pleaded guilty to one count transmitting computer code with the intent of causing damage in excess of $5,000. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Jan. 8. He faces a maximum 10-year sentence and $250,000 fine.

Pick a hat already: Maxwell Butler Also known as Max Vision, this former security consultant was indicted in September by a federal jury on three counts of wire fraud and two counts of transferring stolen identity information. Butler, who used various online aliases, including Iceman, Digits and Aphex, hacked multiple computer networks of financial institutions and card processing firms, selling the account and identity information he stole from those systems. He even made a cut on the profits his accomplices made by selling merchandise that was purchased using the stolen payment card information.

But here's the thing: Butler was once well known in the security community as a researcher. In 2000, he pleaded guilty to one felony county for breaking into protected military and government computers and served jail time for that. He was also accused of hacking into the networks of the developers of PC games Doom and Quake, and stealing several hundred access passwords to a California Internet service provider. During that trial, it was revealed that he had been an FBI informant for at least two years.










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Jaikumar Vijayan Jaikumar Vijayan is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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