Crackdown on
Security
U.S. Department of Defense Crackdown on
Security
The security threat to computer systems, especially
those of large companies, corporations and government departments
has been growing every year, which is why they spend increasing
amounts of money and resources every year to strengthen the
security of their computer systems. They also stage security
crackdowns to catch perpetrators, such as Department of Defense
crackdown earlier this year.
January 2006 security
crackdown
The top commander of the
department of Defense network operations just ordered a crackdown
on security. According to a recent article by NetworkWorld on
January 16, 2006, Lt. General Charles Croom is quoted as saying,
"The attacks are coming from everywhere and they’re getting
better." His talk was the keynote address at the Department of
Defense Cyber Crime Conference held on January 9 - 14, 2005 in
Clearwater, Florida. The event is sponsored by the Defense Cyber
Crime Center and the Joint Task Force. Over 500 computer crime
specialists from the FBI and the military attended the
event.
The arrest of James
Ancheta
The crackdown was related to a
recent arrest of a "Computer Virus Broker" named Jeanson James
Ancheta. On further investigation, a Department of Justice press
release from Nov 3rd, 2005 offered the following
information on this incident, "In the first prosecution of its kind
in the nation, a well-known member of the "botmaster underground"
has been indicted on federal charges for profiting from the use of
"botnets" – armies of computers that are under the control of the
botmaster and are used to launch destructive attacks or to send
huge quantities of spam across the Internet.
Jeanson James Ancheta, 20, of
Downey, California, was arrested this morning by special agents
with the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Ancheta was indicted
yesterday in two separate conspiracies, as well as substantive
charges of attempting to cause damage to protected computers,
causing damage to computers used by the federal government in
national defense, accessing protected computers without
authorization to commit fraud and money laundering."
Ancheta's scheme
The press release goes on to
describe more details of this scheme that clearly show why the
Deparment of Defense is so concerned (for more information go
to:
http://www.usdoj.gov/criminal/cybercrime/anchetaArrest.htm
)
"Ancheta had become an
affiliate of several different advertising service companies, and
those companies paid him a commission based upon the number of
installations. To avoid detection by network administrators,
security analysts and law enforcement, Ancheta would vary the
download times and rates of the adware installations. When
companies hosting Ancheta’s adware servers discovered the malicious
activity, Ancheta redirected his botnet armies to a different
server he controlled to pick up adware. To generate the roughly
$60,000 he received in advertising affiliate proceeds, Ancheta
caused the surreptitious installation of adware on approximately
400,000 compromised computers. Ancheta used the advertising
affiliate proceeds he earned to pay for, among other things, the
multiple servers used to conduct his schemes.
Ancheta used programs powerful
enough to cause the infection of computers at the Weapons Division
of the United States Naval Air Warfare Center in China Lake, as
well as computers belonging to the Defense Information Systems
Agency, a component of the United States Department of Defense.
Both networks are used exclusively by the federal government in
furtherance of national defense. After being arrested this morning
at the FBI Field Office in Los Angeles, Ancheta was transported to
United States District Court in Los Angeles. It is unclear if he
will make his initial court appearance this afternoon or tomorrow.
Ancheta is charged with two counts of conspiracy, two counts of
attempted transmission of code to a protected computer, two counts
of transmission of code to a government computer, five counts of
accessing a protected computer to commit fraud and five counts of
money laundering. Count 17 of the indictment seeks the forfeiture
of more than $60,000 in cash, a BMW automobile and computer
equipment that the indictment alleges are the proceeds and
instrumentalities of Ancheta’s illegal activity."
Some recent security
news
Ancheta pleaded guilty to
charges of conspiring to violate anti-spam and computer misuse
laws, and fraud and will serve from 4-6 years in prison, under the
plea agreement - plus heavy fines.
In their fight against cyber crime authorities will often use
some of the very spyware programs that they're fighting against.
One of those is keylogger, as explained in the next article.
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