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Charges Against High School Hackers Dropped 348

ZosX writes "According to eSchool News Online, the 13 students from Kutztown, PA originally charged with felonies for hacking have been given a deal, dropping charges in exchange for 15 hours of community service. From the article: 'The probation department realizes this is small potatoes,' said William Bispels, an attorney representing nearly half the accused students. This is great news for the students and their families."
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Charges Against High School Hackers Dropped

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  • Unfair! (Score:5, Funny)

    by biryokumaru ( 822262 ) * <biryokumaru@gmail.com> on Friday September 02, 2005 @02:36AM (#13462201)
    When I got in trouble for hacking my high school network, we all got 50 hours of community sevice!

    Lame.

    • Re:Unfair! (Score:5, Informative)

      by mwvdlee ( 775178 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @02:56AM (#13462270) Homepage
      This wasn't really hacking, it was more like typing in the password which was conveniently supplied on a label on the back of the laptops.

      Some students did some minor hacking after the passwords were changed, but that still didn't amount to much more than executing "hacks" that were readily available on the internet, more akin to the work of a script kiddie than a hacker.
      • Re:Unfair! (Score:5, Informative)

        by Sancho ( 17056 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @04:53AM (#13462587) Homepage
        Some students did some minor hacking after the passwords were changed, but that still didn't amount to much more than executing "hacks" that were readily available on the internet, more akin to the work of a script kiddie than a hacker.

        Does this somehow reduce the significance of the crime, or was it just an aside you were adding?

        When I first read about this case, I thought the school was justified. When I found out that the passwords were taped to the machines, I changed my mind. When I found out that later, there was indeed "hacking", I changed my mind again. The students broke the law--the very same law that protects you from having to worry about unauthorized computer access.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Re:Unfair! (Score:4, Insightful)

          by mwvdlee ( 775178 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @07:37AM (#13463071) Homepage
          I do think it reduces the significance of the crime.

          The hacking methods they used were not something the suppliers of the system could not have stopped. They left some easily exploitable holes in there whereas they shouldn't have. They also continued to use that very same password on most systems, even on "fixed" compromised laptops and even after pretty much everybody knew about it.

          I do think they should be punished for their deeds (which they are), it is however no excuse for the gross negligence of the system admins, who basically did next to nothing to prevent, or indeed assist in, hacking. They should have expected children (yes, children; who cannot enter legal contract because they are not considered responsible enough) to play with the toys they are given. They gave these children a half-working toy and pretty much told them "do not try to play with the other half, even though it's a lot more fun" and ignorantly expected them to comply.
        • Re:Unfair! (Score:5, Insightful)

          by j-turkey ( 187775 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @08:34AM (#13463421) Homepage
          Does this somehow reduce the significance of the crime, or was it just an aside you were adding?

          Considering that they were charged with a felony for what essentially amounts to youthful mischief, I'd say that the significance of the crime is pretty minor relative to what they were charged with. No person or property was damaged in any way.

          When I first read about this case, I thought the school was justified. When I found out that the passwords were taped to the machines, I changed my mind. When I found out that later, there was indeed "hacking", I changed my mind again. The students broke the law--the very same law that protects you from having to worry about unauthorized computer access.

          Yeah -- those kids really do deserve punishment. I'd think that 3 weeks of detention, possibly even in-school suspension would be an appropriate action. I'm still baffled by how this all adds up to a felony charge. The students didn't break anything, they didn't access sensitive data, and they didn't disrupt anything. The fact is that this is a mostly harmless crime. I'd want more severe punishment for the kid who uses a sharpie to tag all over my neighborhood. If these kids were convicted of a felony, it would have ruined their lives. Convicted felons don't tend to get jobs, and often resort to crime as its the only way to make a living. Let's save the felony charges for those who are truly harmful and disruptive.

          I hope that maybe some day if you or I ever slip up and are caught commiting a minor or victimless crime, neither of us have to experience heavy handed tactics of making an example of someone.

          Oh, and with regards to your mention of the students breaking the "very same law that protects you from having to worry about unauthorized computer access." It does absolutely nothing of the sort. If I didn't worry about unauthorized computer access, I'd be out of a job. Unreasonably stiff penalties do not make the world a safe place.

          • Re:Unfair! (Score:5, Insightful)

            by Sancho ( 17056 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @09:27AM (#13463751) Homepage
            For the sake of discussion, let's turn to cutusabreak.org, a site which proposes to support the students (though I think some of the passages in there actually harm them).

            Now all along the computer department was monitoring for these infractions and dozens of students were reprimanded and punished for their curiosity. Detentions and in-school suspensions were handed to kids by their homeroom teachers, often with no face-to-face with the disciplinarians. This was hardly a deterrent, though, as the kids were able to take their laptops and play video games during their "punishment."

            They were handing out the sorts of punishments you suggested. Perhaps not for the length of time you suggest, but it's not like they just saw a problem and said, "FELONY!"

            Some laptops were temporarily confiscated for long enough to have them cleansed and returned to their original configuration with a new password. Yet the laptops were still not secure. On several occasions the laptops were returned with the old password still intact. And then the kids learned how to turn off and or limit the administration's ability to spy on what they were doing on their laptops.

            Here we see that the students must have known that what they were doing was not authorized. The notebooks were confiscated long enough to undo the damage and change the admin password. From this point on, the students who had their laptop's password changed had to actively seek out a way to get admin access again. There is no way they didn't know, at this point, that what they were doing was "wrong".

            Now, you suggest that these children, if convicted of felonies, would have their lives totally destroyed. In many states (including Penn.) this is not the case. A person may request that their juvenile record be expunged, under certain situations: ahref=http://www.jlc.org/home/mediacenter/factshee ts/FAQPAJJ.html%23exprel=url2html-4701 [slashdot.org]http://www.j lc.org/home/mediacenter/factsheets/FAQPAJJ.html#ex p>

            Now, many people are going to come back and say that the school screwed up, too. They did. I'll even provide a few examples up front.

            1) They only targetted 13 kids. I have no idea whether these 13 had cracked the password after it was changed. For the sake of argument, I'm going to assume they did (if they did not, the school was definitely way out of line).

            2) They failed to notify the parents, either of the offenses themselves or of the severity of the offenses.

            3) They allowed the use of the laptops during detention, and had no contingency for removing a student from the program. I suspect that there is more to the story than "Some kids who had trouble resisting temptation tried to turn in their laptops and were forced by the administration to take them back." but for the sake of argument, we'll take that as accurate.

            4) They monitored student activity in the first place. I do think that there is a reasonable level of monitoring that can occur when leasing or loaning out hardware, especially if notification of the monitoring is given up front (which it was, in this case, to the student but not the parent, apparently). But I still don't particularly like it, and there are distinct privacy implications considering these were minors.

            5) They didn't secure the computers properly.

            The only one of the above which reduces the culpability of the students is #3. If the student was actually trying to get rid of the temptation by getting rid of the program, they should have allowed that. Of course, we don't know if any of the 13 tried to give up the laptops, which would make the point moot.

            And for the record, I agree with you on making an example of people. I think it's inappropriate and a mockery of the jusice^Wlegal system. But, rather than not prosecuting any of the kids, they should have prosecuted all of t
      • You never actually READ the articles did you?

        If you have mod points, mid the character down. Te disinformation is propogates is damaging to the truth.
        • Yes I did, including most of the news articles and statements made by both sides.

          Did you?

          If you did, then please point out where I'm wrong.
      • So true. I wonder if the school administrators punished the people who were so ignorant as to leave passwords written on a label attached to the machine.

        The sad part is, I've seen that behavior in many places I've worked. When I saw it I'd admonish the person and advise them on crafting passwords that would be hard to break yet easy to remember.

        But there were always hardcases.
    • Re:Unfair! (Score:5, Funny)

      by boisepunk ( 764513 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @03:22AM (#13462363)
      Zero Cool would be proud.
      • I think he would be more crochety.
        Zero Cool: "Back in my day, we didnt have physical access to the computer with the password taped on the back. No, we hacked the gibson from payphones with our 28.8 modems and pentium 1's, and we liked it!"

        Either that, or he'd be too busy with Acid Burn. My god, have you seen her lately?
    • Re:Unfair! (Score:5, Insightful)

      by nahdude812 ( 88157 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @06:58AM (#13462918) Homepage
      Although I know your response was a joke, I think that what happened here was basically executed perfectly.

      The kids repeatedly violated guidelines that were put in place by people with the authority to put those guidelines there. Regardless of whether the measures used to enforce those guidelines were sufficient to deter activity simply by the strength of the restraints or not is unimportant. I can drive my car over the dotted yellow line in the road too if I want, and I can make my car go above the speed limit; that doesn't make it the state's fault when I careen through oncoming traffic at 120 mph.

      Obviously the early traditional reprimands failed to make an impact on the students. What they needed was a good scare, and I think this is what they got. Settling on 15 hours of community service each kid doesn't sound like the prosecuting attorney(ies) ever really intended to send these kids to jail, it sounds to me like they wanted to make the kids fully aware that when you choose to violate guidelines, there are consequences (at least when you're caught, especially when you're flagrant in the actions). And I doubt, when faced with the prospect of jail time, that any of these kids failed to get that message.

      Further, the message was probably received by more than just the kids involved, it was probably received by many other kids in the same district, and in surrounding districts.
      • Re:Unfair! (Score:4, Insightful)

        by avdp ( 22065 ) * on Friday September 02, 2005 @07:45AM (#13463130)
        Yes, I know - it seems to be the popular thing to do to "make examples" out of people. "Send a message" blah blah. I am sorry, I don't think it's appropriate to do that with children. To (potentially) mess up a child's life just so that you can "send a message" should be a crime in itself.

        You also seem to believe that this was the plan all along. Give them a good scare, then end up giving them 15 hours of community service. Yeah right. I am sure the worldwide media attention this case received had plenty to do with the appropriate punishment they did end up getting (as opposed to the ridiculous crime they were charged with). Call me cynical, but I don't believe it was the plan at all. It just ended up to be the only way out the authorities got themselves into without sounding like they completely caved in to the negative media attention.

        And lastly, I have a problem with you comparing this case with dangerous driving. Speeding and moving into the incoming traffic has real physical, possibly deadly, dangers to you and to others on the road. Need I say more, really? changing the admin password on the computer they carry with them all day long so that they can browse the net without the filter, or the damage-less little prank they played with a teacher is totally benign, and the punishment needed to fit the "crime". But really, what should happen is getting these policies that made such an infractions a crime to begin with re-examined.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 02, 2005 @02:42AM (#13462221)
    Jeez, let's all register at "eSchool News". Sigh. Talk about minimum effort editing.
  • Good news? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by syousef ( 465911 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @02:42AM (#13462225) Journal
    They had a moronic school willing to proceed with this stupidity, and they're still at this school I presume? Going to a school where those in power have a severe mental handicap doesn't sound like good news to me. Having the possibility of a felony raised and it taking THIS LONG to and public uproar to dismiss this stupidity doesn't seem like good news to me.

    Good news would be the principal and any police involved in this over-reaction getting an official reprimand.
    • Re:Good news? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @03:13AM (#13462332) Homepage
      I hate to break this to you but after school, College has a severe mential handicap, then work, the managers have severe mential handicaps.

      you never escape it. I strongly suggest becoming extremely adept at social engineering, it will get you out of many situations. Anyone who is really good with any technology today must be a really good social engineer to disguise the fact or to calm those around you.

      and when you potentially run afoul of the law it works great. and officer on his way walking to you to give you crap or possibly arrest you will not do so if the first words out of your mouth are " Officer! I am so glad you are here! can you help me?" if you make the officer think that he is your savoir then he will ignore lots of things to help stroke his ego. Tresspassing? you will be politely told "you know this is a restricted area?" instead of being dragged off screaming by barney fife wanna-be.

      Same goes for school admins, college admins and managers and upper managers at work. none of them will EVER understand technology and you are extremely scary because you know technology.

      Is this fair? no. but it's life. Ask any minority that is persecuted and they will tell you the same thing. you are frightening to them, they see you as dangerous, and they want to keep you under control.
      • - The Profound -
        Men of profound thought
        appear to themselves in intercourse with others
        like comedians
        for in order to be understood
        they must always simulate superficiality

        [Nietzchse]
    • Going to a school where those in power have a severe mental handicap....

      If the entire country can deal with that every day, they can manage at one school in PA.

  • by Palal ( 836081 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @02:44AM (#13462231) Homepage
    I mean grafitti... But the real question is: did this bring out the real curiosity in them or will this forever stop them from exploring computers further?
  • by Motherfucking Shit ( 636021 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @02:44AM (#13462232) Journal
    The case against the "Kutztown 13"--a group of Pennsylvania high school students charged with felonies for tinkering with their school-issued laptop computers--seems to be ending mostly with a whimper.


    In meetings with students over the last several days, the Berks County, Pa., juvenile probation office has quietly offered the students a deal in which all charges would be dropped in exchange for 15 hours of community service, a letter of apology, a class on personal responsibility, and a few months of probation.


    "The probation department realizes this is small potatoes," said William Bispels, an attorney representing nearly half the accused students.


    The 13 initially were charged with computer trespass and computer theft, both felonies, and could have faced a wide range of sanctions, including juvenile detention.


    The Kutztown Area School District said it reported the students to police only after detentions, suspensions, and other punishments failed to deter them from breaking school rules governing computer usage. (See "Felony charges for computer-abusing kids [eschoolnews.com].")


    But the students, their families, and outraged supporters around the nation said that authorities overreacted, punishing the kids not for any horrible behavior but because they outsmarted the district's technology workers.


    The trouble began last fall after the school district issued some 600 Apple iBook laptops to every student at the high school, about 50 miles northwest of Philadelphia.


    Students easily breached security and began downloading forbidden internet programs, such as the popular iChat instant-messaging tool. Some students also turned off a remote monitoring function that let administrators see what students were viewing on their screens--or used the monitoring function to view administrators' own computer screens.


    School district officials and prosecutors did not return phone messages left Aug. 25 and had not been heard from by press time.


    In legal terms, the students have been offered an "informal adjustment"--the least severe form of punishment.


    Bispels said a few students are thinking about refusing the deal because they don't feel they have broken any laws. "A lot of these parents would like to fight this on principle, but it's hard to put the kids at risk on principle," he said.


    Mike Boland, who represents one student, said his client likely will accept the offer. "It doesn't require my client to acknowledge he is guilty of anything," he said.


    "It's about as mild as you can go," agreed James Shrawder, whose 15-year-old nephew was among those offered the deal. "It's more of a face-saving measure."


    One student who has had prior dealings with the juvenile probation office was not offered a deal. That case is expected to proceed.


    Links:


    Students' web site
      http://www.cutusabreak.org [cutusabreak.org]


    Kutztown Area School District's response
      http://www.kasd.org/districtinfo/kasdPressrelease. htm [kasd.org]

    • It's not "as mild as you can go". They still got 15 hours community service. I can understand the defense attorney cutting a deal. You never know how a trial is going to turn out. But then it sounds like somebody with the authorities had some brains. If this case had been brought before a legitimate court, with a decent, intelligent, and fair judge, there was most likely a high probability it would have been thrown out. For example, did these kids even commit a crime? Did they have intent? Or for that matt
    • The trouble began last fall after the school district issued some 600 Apple iBook laptops to every student at the high school, about 50 miles northwest of Philadelphia.
      Well, if they dump 600 iBooks on every student, no wonder they get in trouble. You need a minor warehouse just to store them...
    • Dear Slashdot readers,

      In my defense the article did NOT require registration yesterday when I submitted the article. Had I known that they would have required registration I would have never have used their summary. Someone passed me the link yesterday and I thought it would be great to share with the slashdot community. Thank you very much for posting the full article text, Mother Fuckingshit (great nick btw! seriously!)

      Please accept my humblest of apologies.
  • by kfg ( 145172 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @02:44AM (#13462236)
    but that they really don't stand much of a chance of conviction by jury.

    Not to mention how silly they look.

    KFG
  • by Rogerborg ( 306625 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @02:57AM (#13462272) Homepage
    I hope that at least one of them fights it out, and makes the state (in all senses) that started this madness either see it out, or drop the charges altogether.
    • if you don't view it as a deal, it doesn't seem that harsh. think of it as disciplinary action. i mean if i break one of the school rules (nothing to do with the legal system), i'll be punished either by detention, writing standards, community service, or some other sort of disciplinary action within the school system; and community services is definitely a valid disciplinary action they can choose to use.

      what these kids committed was NOT a felony, but it did BREAK school rules/policies. It may be true that
      • what these kids committed was NOT a felony, but it did BREAK school rules/policies.

        Sure, but not in a way which should have been treated as criminal. They broke school rules, but did they break the law?

        Personally, I'd probably take the deal, because they probably did break some law or another. Not a fair law, but a law nonetheless, and fighting a law that you broke which is just unfair is usually a losing battle and almost definitely so in this particular case.

      • what these kids committed was NOT a felony, but it did BREAK school rules/policies.

        They gained unauthorized access (e.g. Administrator access) to computers they didn't own (the laptops which were on loan).

        This IS against the law.
    • Not gonna happen. The deal doesn't even make them plead guilty to a lesser charge. It would take a ridiculous amount of moral conviction not to take it and to, instead, fight a potentially lengthy court battle which will cost a fair amount of money.
  • I was asked to hack (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Boomshanka ( 788195 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @03:00AM (#13462282)
    When I was in my senior year in high school back in 86 and Apple IIe's were the flavour of the day (wonder if linux will run on it?) the math department had a password protected program for tracking and scoring all the students of the school for that year and guess what.. they forgot the password. I was asked what could I do so I ran the program through a hex dump and looked for unusual words appearing in the hex and found a word "ferret" tried it and got in. So its not all bad to be a computer enthusiast (nerd) at high school. I got no community service for that. I had the chance to up my grades but I of course I didnt.
    • Yeah, but now if they asked you to do that you'd be commiting a felony, and your teacher would be guilty of soliciting criminal activity. YAY circumvention!
      • Only in the good 'ol US of A. At my school, in my final year, I was asked to perform pen-testing of the school network. I found the network admin password, and by some packet-sniffing, the passwords of about 20 senior staff members. I also exposed a number of weaknesses in the schools wifi implementation. I recieved a pat on the back from the head of IT, and de-brief and congratulations by the headmaster, and a few free bits of kit (such as the old wifi boxes that they'd had to replace).
    • It seems that things have changed towards far greater paranoia. Today, it might be wise to get that invitation to hacking in writing. So you can prove that you did it with permission of the computer's owner.
    • Major difference (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Sycraft-fu ( 314770 )
      You were asked by the legal owner to do it. These kids were told, repeatedly, to stop doing this and were punished by the school for it.

      If I lock my keys in my car and call a locksmith to get them he is perfectly allowed to pick my lock since I (the legal owner) requested it. Indeed, he'll even charge me to do it. If you decide to pick my lock randomly for fun, it's a crime and you'll be charged if caught.

      That's the things. Just like with physical property, you aren't allowed to access computers without per
      • by jc42 ( 318812 )
        I can say as a lab admin for a university, if we had to deal with a similar situation, there would be criminal charges as well.

        And I can say, as a parent with kids who have learned about computers, that I'd advise any child to refuse the loan of a computer from any school. To any other parent of school-age children, I'd say: Teach your children to turn down offers of the use of school computers.

        This case is an excellent example why. Yes, you want your children to learn to use computers. The only way to
  • HA (Score:3, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 02, 2005 @03:00AM (#13462287)
    Changing an admin password on an iBook considered hacking. I have heard it all now. I got a similar letter sent to me from a University I once attended but my one stated that I broke 14 out of the 16 rules they had in the computer policy. The other two were too lame to break.

    They started to get worried when I told them how easy it was to crash the University ATM machines. Of cource I got caught as I was cocky like most young kids. They set up a stink ( rather funny thinking about it now). They told me that I was the biggest ever threat to the University ever ( I felt proud ). Ah well I went away and got my computers degree elsewhere.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    15 hours in New Orleans right now would be tough going - they might want to re-do the plea bargain back to a felony !
  • by monstermonster ( 866861 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @03:09AM (#13462314) Homepage
    You know, what I don't get is this - there is a reason that juvenile offenders are supposed to be treated as juveniles by the law. Their brains aren't done developing. They sometimes do juvenile things because they're, well, juvenile. It's not like they murdered someone. And if the school IT guys are idiots, as they often are (I remember explaining a floppy disk to my totally incompetent 8th grade computers teacher back in the dark ages), I don't see that we should be trying to charge kids with felonies. Especially when it's not as if they hacked into some national defense computer. The only lesson it teaches anyone is that we have overzealous prosecutors.

    Give a kid something he's not supposed to get into, and he'll try to get into it. Period. Be stupid about it, and he will get into it.

    • by MosesJones ( 55544 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @05:14AM (#13462627) Homepage
      It's not like they murdered someone

      And this is the problem with the way the US legal system is going. Murder by a juvenille becomes a death penalty offence, and hey look another felony should have them tried as an adult and another.... etc etc etc until we have 12 year olds being tried for fraud because they lied to their parents about tidying their room to get their pocket money.

      Its a more fundamental question than small potatoes, its about whether its right to EVER try juvenilles as adults.
  • by Raindeer ( 104129 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @03:09AM (#13462317) Homepage Journal
    What these kids did sounds like the battle happening between many corporate IT-departments and employees.

    Corporate IT departments erect all kinds of barriers for users to use certain applications and generally don't explain why these barriers are there. The most common answer I have gotten was: "Security". ICT-security is in my jobtitle and I know these guys were bullshitting me. Other things you hear are maintence, complexity or my favourite one: "It is our policy" and "The department heads agreed on this".

    This is a battle that has gone on ever since we started with computers in the workplace. Invariably the result was that people worked around the ivory tower that controlled IT and got what they wanted some way or another (PC's got bought on office supplies budgets in the early eighties, they were forbidden by the high priests of mainframes) Invariably after prolonged fights the users win.

    I currently see the following problems around me, where corporate IT erects barries, that people go around. In most cases corporate IT should enable it in such a way it is safe, or explain very well why it is not allowed at the moment, or at all:
    - Banning of Instant Messaging
    - Filtering of websites beyond porn
    - Banning any Palm-like device, except the corporate one.
    - disabling USB ports.
    - disabling Wifi
    - banning alternative browsers and all kinds of utilities.
    - limiting the size of mailboxes
    - disallowing or crippling desktop search
    - disallowing or crippling streaming media
    - Creating lengthy processes for getting new software on your desktop
    • The list of problems is not nescessarily what I experience in my workplace, but what I see and hear around me.
  • by xiaomonkey ( 872442 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @03:11AM (#13462323)
    So, this appears to be the school's way of backing down gracefully. That is, they get to drop the charges without having to admit that it was wrong to press the charges in the first place.

    Overall, not a bad out come. But, it does leave it as an open question whether or not the school district will every try something like this again.
  • Lucky fucking kids (Score:5, Interesting)

    by rk87 ( 622509 ) <chris.r.walton@NOSpam.gmail.com> on Friday September 02, 2005 @03:23AM (#13462367) Journal

    You know, this is such absolute bullshit.

    Several years ago (I think '99) I was in an optional school activity that fixed computers and made sure the school network worked etc.. There was one particular trouble computer where apparently students snuck on and installed a whole bunch of nasty stuff. One of the other guys that did this with me installed Back Orifice on it to monitor it (remember, those were the days when it was popular). One day he asked me to go on the linux box and check on that computer (I watched him do it plenty of times, so i knew how). At this point, the head of the computer group came around and saw bo2k. Oooh boy was he pissed. Since this was the time of people using bo2k as a virus, he instantly thought it was.

    I told him that I was just checking it for the other guy but when he asked him he knew nothing about it and wondered why there was a virus on the linux box. Fuck.

    I got kicked off the computer group, got a total of abut 25 hours of detention cleaning desks, and my parents got to pay the equivalent of about $200 in "damages". And no, I did NOT make slashdot with this.

    • I wrote a trojan that took advantage of flaws in NetBIOS and infected a whole school (back in 2001):

      Result $500 (CDN) "fine", 1 week suspension and a year without computer access.. .. Wow those poor kids, stupid school.
    • You didn't make Slashdot with installing Back Orifice on a computer - instead you had to clean some desks. Boohoo. You also didn't have felony charges brought against you for what you did, did you?

      These kids were threatened with just that, and then they were told they'd never get into college or find a good job, due to their upcoming felony case. Making kids think they are going to jail for using a password that was supplied with the computer is absurd.

      On a final note - VNC was already alive and kickin
      • by rk87 ( 622509 )

        If you had actually read my comment, you would know that I was not the one that installed BO2K, but the other guy that claimed he didn't. These days, I use TightVNC exclusively.

        And, what I didn't mention, is that they told me they would press charged if I didn't clean the desks and my parents didn't pay the fines. If they were actually going to do it, i don't know, but what was I supposed to know? It's fucked either way _especially_ since I didn't install it.

  • by Antony-Kyre ( 807195 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @03:33AM (#13462390)
    The below really bothers me. Someone may think that accepting that kind of offer admits no guilt, but in reality, it admits you're guilty. The logic is that if you are truly innocent, you should have no problem in court. But then again, the American judicial system is so messed up, especially towards juveniles/minors, it may be next to impossible to get a fair trial/proceeding.

    http://www.mcall.com/news/local/all-b4_5kutztown-3 aug26,0,1647962,print.story?coll=all-newslocal-hed [mcall.com]

    Mike Boland, who represents one student, said his client probably will accept the offer. ''It doesn't require my client to acknowledge he is guilty of anything,'' he said.
  • by Lellor ( 910974 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @03:37AM (#13462406)
    Here in Kelowna, British Columbia, a co-worker of mine found out about this via an email sent by his relatives in the US who knew about the case, and we discussed it for quite a while at work.

    The general consensus is that the authorities in the US have become too strict, especially with "intellectual property", "the war on drugs", and "computer crimes".

    They are basically making themselves a laughing stock internationally - the Canadian public doesn't seem impressed by what the current US adminsitration is doing, or how they are handling these issues.

    Things like this would not happen in any other industrial, civilized G7 democracy, like Canada for example.

    It's quite shocking that the authorities are punishing students for using passwords - that they were given!
    • DAMMIT MODS (Score:4, Insightful)

      by RAMMS+EIN ( 578166 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @05:11AM (#13462618) Homepage Journal
      So here this guy goes pointing out how ridiculous the situation is, and how it is a nice example of US authorities having become too strict. That's not exactly rocket science, it's been said many times before that USAmericans are too sue-happy and that authorities don't have the wits to understand technology - often leading to ridiculous situations (software patents, anyone?).

      And just because he said he's Canadian it's modded flamebait! I hate to break it to you, but this is a real problem is the USA, and it isn't a problem in most of the rest of the western world. So instead of silencing those who criticize you, perhaps you should let them speak, so that the situation may be improved?

      If this were only one incident, I wouldn't bother to post this, but I'm fed up with americans sticking their heads in the sand and telling those trying to educate them to piss off.

      Nice example: the Europeans who wrote letters before the last elections, arguing why people shouldn't vote for Bush. Guess what happened? The reaction was: piss off I'm not gonna let you tell me what to vote. Not an unnatural reaction, really, but it's very sad considering how ignorant many Americans are about the rest of the world. So here the rest of the world comes and tries to educate them, and their arguments aren't even considered. Now that's ignorant and smug about it!
    • Mods? Hello? (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Zeebs ( 577100 ) <.rsdrew. .at. .gmail.com.> on Friday September 02, 2005 @05:49AM (#13462703)
      I can speak to the truth of this. When I was in my 4th year of highschool the IT department decided they wanted to lock down all the computers in the school, passwords this that and the other thing. They did this even in the lab that was used exclusivly for the programming courses, needless to say, pain in the arse. A small group of the students got a little annoyed about having to get up and get the teacher to unlock the computer at the start of every class, and anytime we managed to crash one among other things. So we conspired, about 3 of us, to obtain the passwords we needed to work freely, simply quickly mocking up a dummy screen and getting the teacher to unlock the computer. Now this is far worse then what these students did, we actually stole the password, it wasn't written down anywhere we could get to. You know what happened?

      The teacher thought it was great, we all had a good laugh, he even wanted to have a look at the source for our little tool. Now, we did admit to the teacher we did this however, because there wasn't an environment of fear about going to jail for basicly a simple prank.

      Had that been the case for these students the state might actually have had a case and gone to trial with it.
  • Hmmm.... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Legendof_Pedro ( 900265 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @03:41AM (#13462416) Homepage
    I'm glad they're dropping the charges, but seriously, shouldn't this be a civil matter, not a felony?
  • by Evets ( 629327 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @04:18AM (#13462505) Homepage Journal
    For those that haven't followed the story, here is the link to a site representing the student's side of the story: http://www.cutusabreak.org/ [cutusabreak.org]
  • sad... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 02, 2005 @04:18AM (#13462506)
    i am currently attending junior high.

    the sad thing is the school management and even some it departments are very naive about their computer security. i recently ALMOST got suspended from school from using batch files to start word, internet explorer, or excel! (they believe batch files constitute as a hacking tool/device that can compromise network security).

    ideally, IT staff should be trained properlly and understand that security is only as good as the person enforcing it. if school network security is bad, then perhaps they should hire better people. this is because i recently got the admin password of the local computer taking about 15 minutes (1) boot usb key 2) copy sam file from hdd to usb 3) use saminside to generate pwdump file of sam hashes 4) pass the pwdump file to l0phtcrack which passes the hash through a rainbow table - the password was 6chars long with 1 number!?) - the IT staff were so naive to have the network and local computer pass the same, and allowing booting to usb key.

    in the ideal world, school network security would be standardized and out-sourced to higher-skilled people.

    these kids should be commended for proving how in-effective school network security is.
    • in the ideal world, school network security would be standardized and
      out-sourced to higher-skilled people.
      I believe you have lot to learn about IT outsourcing...
    • Well, lessee, how many school districts can afford IT staff that is trained properly? Let's face it, if you're trained properly in IT security, and have the skillset necessary to lock down a high-school computer system, you're probably working for a firm that can pay a lot more.

      Heck, even so-called "script-kiddies" are highly motivated. They have enormous amounts of time they can dedicate to figuring out how to compromise a system. The one IT guy at a school (if the school is lucky to have one FTE in IT) i
    • Re:sad... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by MichaelSmith ( 789609 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @05:05AM (#13462610) Homepage Journal
      i recently got the admin password of the local computer taking about 15 minutes

      A word of advice from somebody a lot older: save this kind of stuff for your own systems. If you want to get involved with sysadmin stuff then you should start by gaining the trust of the people who run your school systems.

      I can see that you are talented, but your admin people are just going to come down on you for it.

      Oh, and don't brag about your accomplishments, even as AC. Word gets around. Remember the really smart people keep this kind of information to themselves.

      • If you want to get involved with sysadmin stuff then you should start by gaining the trust of the people who run your school systems.

        In the end, it doesn't matter. Trusted or not, to blame or not, when something goes wrong, everyone's going to think it's your fault. Because you know something they don't and are therefore suspicious. If you want to avoid being blamed, then pretend to be as ignorant as everyone else.
  • Outrageous (Score:5, Interesting)

    by hooeezit ( 665120 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @04:19AM (#13462512)
    The authorities in question had the gall to offer a compromise that included:

    15 hours of community service, a letter of apology, a class on personal responsibility, and a few months of probation.

    A letter of apology? That I'm sighted, not dumb, and would like to use convenient technology to stay in touch with my friends?

    And what is this from one of the defendant attorneys:

    Mike Boland, who represents one student, said his client likely will accept the offer. "It doesn't require my client to acknowledge he is guilty of anything," he said.

    I'd say a letter of apology counts as acknowledging guilt, at least in my books!
    If you keep track of Paul Graham's essays (try http://store.yahoo.com/paulgraham/nerds.html [yahoo.com]), you will probably recognize this as a glowing example of the holding pen analogy he uses vis-a-vis present day school system. I'm apalled that the most important thing that these bright kids are impressioned with is 'Obey the Thought Police'!
  • by RAMMS+EIN ( 578166 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @04:58AM (#13462597) Homepage Journal
    Reading the students' story [cutusabreak.org], it sounds almost like The Right to Read [gnu.org].

    Student Story:

    At a school board meeting ~ a year ago, opponents of the high school's Computer Initiative predicted that the administration would not be able to control the student's access to inappropriate internet sites...


    It would allow the computer department to monitor student activity and it limited access to the network and internet. This configuration was protected by an administrative password and, as our administration discovered, the laptop could be easily reconfigured by curious students when the password was not secured...

    At least one student figured it out and passed it along until ~ 80 - 100 of the students had access to it...

    the Kutztown Police Department notified the parents of 13 high school students that their children were being charged with the crime of Computer Trespass. This offense is graded by the state as a felony of the 3rd degree.


    Right to Read:

    This put Dan in a dilemma. He had to help her--but if he lent her his computer, she might read his books. Aside from the fact that you could go to prison for many years for letting someone else read your books...


    In his software class, Dan had learned that each book had a copyright monitor that reported when and where it was read, and by whom, to Central Licensing...

    There were ways, of course, to get around the SPA and Central Licensing. They were themselves illegal. Dan had had a classmate in software, Frank Martucci, who had obtained an illicit debugging tool, and used it to skip over the copyright monitor code when reading books.
  • Sounds familiar... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by bogd ( 912084 )
    Yes, I am a criminal. My crime is that of curiosity. My crime is that of judging people by what they say and think, not what they look like. My crime is that of outsmarting you, something that you will never forgive me for.

    Some things never change...

  • High School and, as everyone else has pointed out, EVERYTHING which follows is just plain brain damaged:
    • Through school and high school, I got harassed, teased and when others were baking their own rear-ends, I was also depended on for my 'skill with computers.'

      You earned respect from teachers. You earned more of a stigma from students. Finally, you were distrusted by the same stupid teachers if something went wrong. You'd show someone one of your programs and they'd be like, 'how do you do something

  • Maybe they should do their community service explaining to people how to use their computers securely.
  • by macdaddy ( 38372 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @07:57AM (#13463205) Homepage Journal
    I've been in nearly this exact same boat (minus the legal charges). I was accused of causing around $14k worth of damages (labor for the outsourced IT company to come down and fix the problem) way back when I was a freshman in HS. It was not possible that neither I nor the other person they accused could have done the dead though because 1) I was home sick on the Saturday that the logs show the first of the damage and I was at the doctor 1+ hours away on Monday when the second round of damage occured, and 2) the other kid was on the basketball court playing in a JV tournament on that Saturday (that I missed because I was sick), and was at home having supper with his family when the second round of damage occured. When pressed with this information the principal even admitted that neither of us could have caused the damage. He needed a scapegoat though. The other kid's parents had the right approach. They told the principal in no uncertain terms to go to hell and that they were through with the matter. My mother was a district teacher though so that wouldn't fly. The principal made me do 120 hours of community service. It was easy to account for though since I filmed all the football games (which he counted) and had worked for the school pro bono for years.

    However after all of that came to an end, I was still treated by the school staff as some sort of hacker. Many openly expressed their distrust of me around their computers. Whenever ANYTHING ever went wrong with the computer system I was the first person they blamed. Now I was also the one they always turned to for a fix to their problem. Still I had to put up with all that grief just because my parents elected to take the deal.

    Moral of the story, if you're innocent then don't agree to any deal where blame can still be associated with you. If you're innocent then make damned certani everyone knows it.

  • If I tape the key to my house on my front door, I'm an idiot. If someone notices and uses the key to enter my house, they're breaking and entering*, even if they only hung out and watched tv for a bit.

    The new punishment is more appropriate to the offense, but trivializing it as something that should be overlooked is not the answer. An incompetent admin doesn't negate that the kids knew what they were doing was wrong.

    * Breaking and entering requires only the slightest amount of force. Pushing open a door
  • by wubboy ( 96276 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @08:28AM (#13463385)
    I'm sorry. I'm very sorry that your network security is a disgrace.
    I'm sorry that your network admin staff is completely braindead.
    I'm sorry that the ADMIN passwords were taped to the back of the laptops by what must have been the single most stupid person on the planet.
    I'm sorry that likely the only thing anyone learned out of this is that 13 kids "broke in to the schools computers".
    I'm sorry that noone will ever think to FIRE the dumbass who taped the passwords to the back of the computers.

    I'm sorry that I had to write this.
  • Pleas and felonies (Score:4, Insightful)

    by hotspotbloc ( 767418 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @08:32AM (#13463408) Homepage Journal
    The fact is in the US felony charges are used the vast majority of the time as a club to coerce a plea agreement to a lesser felony or misdemeanor charge rather than a State's Attorney's honest desire to prosecute a real felonious crime.

    Felonies are meant to be serious crimes like "aggravated assault, arson, burglary, murder, and rape" [wikipedia.org] and not minor infractions like what the "Kutztown 13" possibly did. Almost 95% of felony charges result in a guilty conviction via a plea agreement [pbs.org]. It's rather disgusting.

    IMO the only reason the "Kutztown 13" got off without a conviction is because of the multitude of complaints generated by the Internet and not out of any "common sense" of any prosecutor. The criminal justice in the US is like a giant meat grinder where the innocent and guilty get ground up together and spit out the other end. "Justice" is rarely a factor.

  • by soft_guy ( 534437 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @01:52PM (#13465606)
    What is the point of requiring every kid in the school to carry a laptop around with them? What benefit is there to that? According to the article, the teachers did not like the program because the laptops were a distraction in class.

    I'm certainly not against computers, and I think they do have a place in education (writing reports, etc), but not in the classroom.

    Kids need to spend school time learning academic subjects, not IMing each other and downloading music.
  • Not really a crime (Score:3, Insightful)

    by bezuwork's friend ( 589226 ) on Friday September 02, 2005 @07:48PM (#13467662)
    I'd just like to add that I don't think this is a crime that should have got the DA involved.

    My reasoning is that the computers were given as part of the school's activities, as part of a mandatory program, if I understand correctly.

    Since schools are de facto guardians of students while the students are under their control, they are effectively parents. I believe it's termed in loco parentis.

    Anyway, a DA would not get involved if a kid hacked his parent's computers - it would be a domestic issue in most cases. So I say the school should handle it this way as well. If it's bad enough, then expulsion. But not a felony charge. That's not right. Kids will be kids, and schools should shoulder the responsibility, since the law requires parents to surrender their kids to them.

    was suspended for violating school rules once.
    is a fun story to tell now.

"Being against torture ought to be sort of a multipartisan thing." -- Karl Lehenbauer, as amended by Jeff Daiell, a Libertarian

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