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Saturday, June 12, 2004

Most wanted cyber criminal...

Got this article from Internet. Probably you also want to know about this. Well have fun reading.

Until 1995, when he was jailed for five years in a US federal prison, Kevin Mitnick was at the top of the FBI's "most wanted" list, yet he had killed no one, had no links with the Mafia, had never dealt in drugs, committed serial rape or held up a bank.

Yet he struck fear into the heart of the US Government and corporate America. He was, and remains, America's most notorious cyber criminal, a hacker of great skill who, according to the evidence against him, penetrated some of the most sensitive databases in the world, stole software worth millions of dollars and cost the US Government a fortune before he was caught.

Today, Mr Mitnick is the poacher turned gamekeeper.

Released from prison in January, 2000, he is still banned from using a computer, logging into the Internet, using e-mail or a mobile phone, a prohibition due to be lifted on January 20, 2003 unless, as his supporters suspect it may, the US Government presses further charges against him.

Until recently, he was not even allowed to talk about computers or work in the field as a consultant, but those bans have been lifted and he will speak to Australians in May at an IT security conference in Sydney, telling delegates how to protect themselves against people like him.

He will not be here in person, but will be seen and heard via high-speed Internet video link, an event that, for him, represents a considerable breakthrough in the legal entanglements with which he has lived for almost seven years.

Meantime, Mr Mitnick makes his living with an elderly electric typewriter, writing syndicated newspaper and magazine articles, which he dictates over the telephone to a copytaker. He also earns money speaking as an expert in network design and management and, above all, security, to IT groups.

The manhunt for Mr Mitnick is one of the modern sagas of US criminal history. Teams of FBI agents and private investigators worked day and night tracking the elusive hacker through the labyrinths of the Internet and from one hideout to another before trapping him in Raleigh, North Carolina, not far from the main campus of IBM.

Many in the cyber community, particularly those who object to what they see as the hijacking of the Internet by crass commercialism, vigorously defend Mr Mitnick as the victim of big business and bigger government. Others say he was just a common thief. That the property he took was digital information in cyberspace made his crime no different than if he had tried to steal the crown jewels or truck gold bars out of Fort Knox, they say. He is said to have cost companies, among them Motorola, Novell, Nokia and Sun Microsystems, millions of dollars by stealing their software secrets and altering computer information.

Mr Mitnick's nemesis was not an FBI agent but a Japanese computer scientist, Tsutomu Shimomura, who is a senior fellow at the San Diego Supercomputer Centre in California. Mr Mitnick made the cardinal error of sneaking into Mr Shimomura's computer network and stealing data and e-mails.

Mr Shimomura saw Mr Mitnick's penetration of his network as a gross invasion of his personal privacy. From then on it was a case of the enraged samurai in search of revenge. His relentless pursuit of Mr Mitnick is seen by many in the hacker community as needless persecution of someone who, they say, did no real harm. It was, essentially, a case of one obsessive pursuing another to an inevitable conclusion.

Mr Mitnick's exploits produced several books, one, called Takedown, written by Mr Shimomura in collaboration with John Markoff, the New York Times correspondent in Silicon Valley, was made into a fairly unremarkable movie of the same name.

Mr Mitnick also featured in an earlier book, Cyberpunks, written by Markoff in collaboration with his then wife, Newsweek journalist Katie Haffner.

Critics of the campaign against Mitnick take some pleasure in noting that Markoff and Haffner split up.

Mr Mitnick is disparaging of most corporate and government security measures. Stealing an individual's identity is like taking lollies from a toddler, he says. Most people - even banks and similar financial institutions handling billions of the public's dollars - are woefully lax about passwords, user names and other data used to verify an individual. Many ask for the maiden name of a customer's mother and use that, and/or a birthdate to check an identity. Yet an even moderately keen crook can find such details readily available in public records, he says.

"Many governments and private organisations keep our so-called private information in widely accessible databases, and many opportunities exist for identity thieves to reach it," Mr Mitnick said in a recent article on IT security.

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