British Authorities Nail Online Blackmailers 153
Iphtashu Fitz writes "CNet's News.com is reporting that 3 men have been arrested for allegedly blackmailing websites by threatening DDoS attacks if they didn't pay between $10,000 and $55,000. Britians National Hi-Tech Crime Unit (NHTCU) worked with the targeted websites to combat the DDoS attacks and to track their origin. With the help of Russian police they identified and arrested three Russians and expect more arrests in the near future."
In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
*ponders*
Send 100 USD to this pay pal account or I'll submit a slashdot story which links to your personal website.
hehe.
Re:In other news... (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe you haven't noticed the rise in advertisements masquerading as articles on
Re:In other news... (Score:1)
Re:In other news... (Score:1)
(Sorry in advance) (Score:2, Funny)
Re:(Sorry in advance) (Score:1)
DDoS (Score:5, Funny)
Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:1)
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:2)
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:1)
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:4, Informative)
Arrests are invariably over allegations. In the UK, at least, we have a whole court system that determines whether the allegations were true and that only kicks in after arrest. In this case the charges were for blackmail. Blackmail is by its nature based on threats. If you're from the US then I think you call the crime "extortion" instead.
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:1, Funny)
The X makes it sound cool.
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:1)
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:2)
Threatening to commit a crime to extort payment is a crime.
Threatening to hurt someone is a crime.
Planning to commit a crime is considered a crime in some cases.
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:2)
Hell, according one site site It is illegal to enter some community in Washington with criminal intent without phoning the chief of police.
site [tripod.com]
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:1)
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:1)
And in some jurisdictions, conspiracy to commit a misdemeanor is a felony. Go figure.
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:2, Informative)
Now the case on jurisdiction will be interesting. Presumably the menaces were delivered over the Internet from Russia. So where was the crime committed? Are they subject to extradition?
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:1)
Becuase of the whole "innocent until proven guilty (unless a suspected terrorist)" thing, news sources don't say some has commited a crime in the UK, until they have been found guilty. By adding 'allegedly' the news source can't be sued by the person if they are later found innocent.
In this case the crime is blackmail/extortion, and it is alleged until/if they are found guilty.
It's a running joke on the popular UK satrical news quiz Have I Got News For You they will say very rude and outrageous (althou
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:2)
Also, the UK courts generally take the view that the right of the accused to a fair trial outweighs the freedom of the press (until the trial is over).
News media are always careful not to say anything that might prejudice a t
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:3, Funny)
*The preceding post alleges that your sister is of legal age.
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:2)
Dude, there's no room in the closet for you too. Go find your own girl to spy on.
Re:Allegedly threatening a DDoS attack? (Score:2)
DoS attacks (Score:1)
pay me $10k... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:pay me $10k... (Score:1)
Re:pay me $10k... (Score:1)
Actually my site isn't in a lot of danger. It's fairly dull. CmdrTaco will either laugh at you, or post it twice.
Shake it up! (Score:2)
Best way to shake a tree? Find a brit that's been proven to be a great shaker [channel4.com]. Louise Woodward's not doing anything lately...
Fortunate for them... (Score:2)
Re:Fortunate for them... (Score:1)
Re:Fortunate for them... (Score:2)
I say good job (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I say good job (Score:3, Informative)
Well now (Score:1)
Mmmmm (Score:2, Funny)
So you can bargain with these guys?
Re:Mmmmm (Score:1)
Re:Mmmmm (Score:2)
Yes, if you pay early they'll also throw in a set of steak knives....
Revision 2.0 (Score:2, Funny)
The scope of this would surprise many of you. (Score:5, Interesting)
Contrary to what some say, the US authorities *DO* care what's going on... they just can't prosecute directly unless it's affecitng US business.
These people and similar operators have extored millions of dollars in the last 12 months alone.
I'm sure many will come out and say "Oh well if you had just built your network properly...".. oh, if only it were that simple. These attacks have come in at over 4Gbps... and no matter how you slice it, that's a shitload of bandwidth.
The slashdot effect is jack shit compared to what these guys have unleashed for WEEKS at a time on one site alone.
Re:The scope of this would surprise many of you. (Score:1, Informative)
Correction: they can't prosecute unless the attackers are located in the US or a country that has an extradition treaty with the US. Even if the attackers are fucking up US businesses with their DDoS attacks, the US can't do anything aside from attempt to stop the attacks up to a point. The only time they can do something is if there is a lot at stake as a result of the attacks.
Also, having the Russians actually cooperate on an investig
Re:The scope of this would surprise many of you. (Score:1)
When you ask instead of demand you get co operation. UK police have a good record of getting co operation from others, usually because they give it themselves.
Re:The scope of this would surprise many of you. (Score:1)
The US Govt. was actually quite helpful during related attacks earlier this year, even though they would most likely not end up prosecuting anyone.
Re:The scope of this would surprise many of you. (Score:2)
Admittedly most ISP couldn't be bothered to check, but with the right hardware a victim could ana
Re:The scope of this would surprise many of you. (Score:2, Informative)
These attacks come from all over - not just from one or two hundred easily identifiable sources - you do not understand the scale. Huge numbers of requests, from distributed locations, converge upon one location.
So much bandwidth is generated, Tier 1 ISP's are forced to block the target IP address range.
Re:The scope of this would surprise many of you. (Score:1)
So tell me, smarteyman, as my ISP, how do you plan to block 4Gbps of legitimate-looking web requests coming from 30,000 hosts in nearly an equal number of unrelated subnets, distributed globally?
Further.. (Score:1)
Also, your ISP is not necessairly obligated to deal with this; it may be far cheaper for them, given the resources they would need to throw at this to keep their customer up, to simply drop the problem customer, which is what many did.
Your ISP isn't necessairly going to add tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars in equipment and manpower and sacrifice half
Re:The scope of this would surprise many of you. (Score:2)
If a sites incoming traffic suddenly exceeds a certain level, drop 9 of every ten requests to that server, going up to 99 of every hundred if the problem gets worse.
In case one, legit people still have a 10% chance of contact, while the hard to set up and rare 30,000 zombie attack is blunted. The site is hindere
Re:The scope of this would surprise many of you. (Score:1)
That's not solving the problem, nor does it require much infrastructure.
The actual solution involves tons of caching and load balancing, as well as very aggressive filtering (to-date, you can generally detect some aspect of the zombie behavior that differs from a legitimate user's request.. and thereby block it out).
Also, the
Re:The scope of this would surprise many of you. (Score:1)
Oh, you are going to cache those 10% of addresses and let all their traffic through? The attackers will quickly fill that up.
Why DDos? (Score:1)
Re:Why DDos? (Score:1, Insightful)
Think 30,000 zombie machines distributed globally slamming 4 gigabits/second at your puny gigabit connected website.
Re:Why DDos? (Score:2)
Re:Why DDos? (Score:2)
Is Ford liable when somebody smashes the windows on an Explorer, climbs in, hotwires the car, and runs somebody down? After all, their windows were obviously not up to the task of keeping somebody out....
NO. Of course not. The fault lies, as always, with the person ACTUALLY COMMITTING THE CRIME.
Why is 'personal responsibility' such a difficult concept?
Re:Why DDos? (Score:2)
Re:Why DDos? (Score:2)
Should we sue Red Hat every time some idiot installs a machine from that old RH 6.2 CD he has lying around, and it gets owned within thirty seconds of being on the Internet?
Of course not. A WinXP or 2k machine, up to date with the *automatic* updates, is perfectly secure for day to day use. The vast majority, if not all, of the 'windows worms' of the last several YEARS; code red, nimda, sasser, the patches preceeded the worms themselves by weeks, sometimes months.
Re:Why DDos? (Score:2)
Re:Why DDos? (Score:2)
"Hey, honey, we just got this letter from Ford announcing a recall of several hundred thousand vehicles...."
Re:Why DDos? (Score:2)
Re:Why DDos? (Score:2)
Ok, how about a parallel between Windows Update (or Red Hat Network) and, say, regular car maintanence?
zombies with no zombie masters (Score:1)
Ya, I know, a lot of questions, still, they are obvious to be asked at this point.
Re:Why DDos? (Score:2)
Re:Why DDos? (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm probably feeding a troll here, but what the hell. Why do you need to see code? It's little more than a massive surge in traffic which looks legitimate. Try this pseudocode on for size:
while(1)
- recursively get victim's entire website
Now spread that across 100,000 zombie machines, each capable of pulling in an average of maybe 20KB/s. Suddenly the victim's dealing with 2GB/s of traffic or, more likely, not dealing with it as the traffic would thoroughly saturate not only the victim's website but also the entire hosting provider's network.
Re:Why DDos? (Score:2, Interesting)
Companies and webmasters cry DDOS when their website just simply cant handle the flood.
Granted, some attacks are genuine, but all it takes to DDOS someone is a posting on one of the many websites (not just slash) that the original webadmin wasn't expecting.
Its like hearing in the news about an ongoing DDOS attack on xyz's site, whats the first thing you do?
I know I try and load the page.....
Re:Why DDos? (Score:2)
Actually, this is what I'm interested in. I'll try the while(1) thing tonight on our server
what's next? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:what's next? (Score:1, Insightful)
MOD PARENT UP (Score:2)
Re:what's next? (Score:4, Informative)
This has been around since the dawn of man. "Do X or else I'll do Y." X can be a request for money, goods, services, actions... you name it; Y is generally always something which will harm the intended victim, whether financially, personally, or emotionally. Extortion is certainly nothing new and, while it's often terrifying for the victim, it isn't necessarily a terrorist activity.
Heck, compare the following three extortion demands:
Mild: "If you don't stop playing Doom 3 so much, I'm leaving you."
Medium: "Give me a raise or I'll alert the media about the company's fudged finances."
Intense: "Clear out of Iraq or we execute these hostages."
Re:what's next? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:what's next? (Score:2)
This is extortion not blackmail (Score:5, Informative)
Blackmail [reference.com] is defined as: 1. Extortion of money or something else of value from a person by the threat of exposing a criminal act or discreditable information.
While Extortion [reference.com] is: 1. The act of extorting; the act or practice of wresting anything from a person by force, by threats, or by any undue exercise of power; undue exaction; overcharge.
Now since these guys weren't threatening to reveal something about the company this is garden variety extortion and not blackmail.
Re:This is extortion not blackmail (Score:5, Informative)
These people are being accused of blackmail.
Re:This is extortion not blackmail (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This is extortion not blackmail (Score:2)
Re:This is extortion not blackmail (Score:1)
Re:This is extortion not blackmail (Score:1)
Britian (Score:3, Informative)
10,000 POUNDS, not DOLLARS (Score:3, Informative)
"the gang reportedly would demand a sum of between $18,000 and $55,000 (10,000 pounds and 30,000 pounds)."
Re:Britian (Score:2)
Re:Britian (Score:2)
You are right that United Kingdom is the political name though. "United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Island"
Re:Britian (Score:2)
Of course they got caught. (Score:1)
They are asking for way too much money. If they had set realistic goals for themselves, they would not have ended up in a position like they are in today. Frankly, asking for the ammount of cash that they did seems very juvinile. Just my $.02
Re:Of course they got caught. (Score:2)
Ouch... (Score:3, Interesting)
As I understand it, Russia is a bad place to get busted for anything. I wonder what they do when the crime is in the 50k range.
Anyone know anything about modern Russian legal?
Are you sure these guys are for real? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Why in hell would a National high-tech crime unit [nhtcu.org] have a flash website? Worse than that, a single-page, 100% width scaling flash website.
They clearly don't have geeks running the show there, which I'd have throught was the first prerequisite for an effective high-tech crime unit. Looks like Yet Another Paper-Thin Government Initiative to me.
Re:Are you sure these guys are for real? (Score:1)
Re:Are you sure these guys are for real? (Score:1)
And what about Spywareinfo? (Score:2)
Why gambling sites? (Score:2)
I'm going to put forward a theory based on some completely unsubstantiated rumours I have heard. A mate of a mate of some bloke in the pub tells me that a lot of online gambling sites do at least a sideline in money laundering. That is, two people log onto the site, one 'loses' a large amount of money, the other 'wins' a similar amount of money at th
Oh brother.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Because they do money laundering? There may be the odd bookie out there who took some dirty money, but by and large this is total nonsense.
You might be surprised the lengths many internet gambling places go to to prevent being used to launder money. The LAST thing any gaming shop wants is the international authorities busting down their door and shutting them down. It's already a good profitable business if done right.. there is no need to accept the increased risk of laundering money for a small extra pr
US Dollars? (Score:1)
"Britians" (Score:1)
Re:Sad news ... sellfone, dead at 17 (Score:1, Offtopic)
Miles, aka sellfone, died at his home in Texas Sunday night. He was 24 I believe, not 17, as you can tell by clicking on this link http://www.slashnet.org/forums/Freedows-19980708. h tml
Couldn't have been 9 years old in that log.
He is an icon on Efnet, and the network admins have juped his name in honor of him.
Rate this post as you will, but I just wanted to be sure a proper memorial was made. The BitchX crew has more informatio
Re:Sad news ... sellfone, dead at 17 (Score:1)
Re:Unscrupulous Hosting Firms (Score:2)
Re:Extortion (Score:2)
(I Am Not A Criminal Investigator)