Home > FBI Arrests Penn Student in Global Botnet Crackdown

News

FBI Arrests Penn Student in Global Botnet Crackdown

12/14/2007

The FBI has charged a University of Pennsylvania student and a New Zealand hacker as part of an international probe into the spread of botnets, large replicating malicious software networks, the Associated Press reported.

Ryan Goldstein, 21, was one of eight people have that have been indicted, pleaded guilty, or convicted since the investigation started in June, the AP said. Thirteen additional warrants have been served in the United States and overseas in the investigation, which the FBI said has uncovered more than $20 million in economic losses.

Law enforcement in New Zealand has searched the residence of Owen Walker, an 18-year-old suspected to be the ringleader of the group, which is believed to have infected more than 1 million computers, the FBI said. The federal agency identified the person by the online handle, "AKILL."

AKILL and Goldstein were allegedly involved in crashing a University of Pennsylvania engineering school server Feb. 23, 2006, according to the FBI.

The server, which normally handles about 450 daily requests for Internet downloads, got 70,000 requests from the account of an unsuspecting Penn student over four days, the FBI said. Over time, the FBI followed an electronic trail from that student's account to Goldstein's screen name, "Digerati," and the New Zealand hacker.

The crash briefly shut down computers at Penn's School of Engineering and Applied Sciences but did relatively little damage, university spokesman Ron Ozio told the AP.

Patricia Hartman, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, told UPI that Goldstein prevailed upon Walker to use his botnet to launch denial of service attacks on several Internet discussion forums from which he had been banned.

The New Zealand hacker told him "basically, 'I can do it, but I need a place to load this software,'" Hartman told UPI.

Goldstein has pleaded not guilty and was released on bail while awaiting a trial set for March 10. He faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine if convicted of the single count of conspiracy to commit computer fraud.

Read More:


Paul McCloskey is a contributing editor for the Campus Technology group of publications.

Cite this Site

Paul McCloskey, "FBI Arrests Penn Student in Global Botnet Crackdown ," Campus Technology, 12/14/2007, http://www.campustechnology.com/article.aspx?aid=56614

copy text (above) for proper citation



Recommended Reading
  • Tiffin U's New Online College to Use Pearson's eCollege for Course Management

    Beginning this fall, students in Tiffin University's newest online program, Ivy Bridge College, will use eCollege, a course management system from Pearson, for all of their online courses. The 2,350-student Tiffin U is located in Tiffin, OH and offers both on-campus and online classes. Since 2005, those online courses have been managed through Jenzabar Internet Campus Solution.

  • California Community Colleges Adopt SunGard Banner Software

    California's Rio Hondo College and Sierra College have selected software from the Banner Unified Digital Campus and other solutions from SunGard Higher Education to help address their growing enrollments and to help improve student retention and services.

  • Luidia Releases eBeam Interact 2.1 for Interactive Whiteboards

    Luidia has released a new version its eBeam software for use with classroom-based interactive projection environments. eBeam Interact 2.1 offers both new and upgraded features, including enhanced screen recording and a comprehensive online image gallery, as well as the company's Scrapbook Image Writer feature.

  • McGill U Library Scanning Rare Books with Kirtas

    McGill University Library in Montreal will be using a Kirtas Technologies APT BookScan 2400RA to digitize its collections. The company says that the 2400RA is capable of acquiring page images at the rate of 2,400 pages per hour. The library will be working with Ristech, a Canadian reseller, to implement the digitization solution.

  • Ball State U Web Sites Now Managed with Sitecore

    Ball State University in Muncie, IN has gone public regarding its deployment of a Web site content management system from Sitecore. Ball State chose Sitecore's software to revamp its 220-plus sites, integrating common new media applications and garnering a next-generation user experience that has won several awards from education and new media marketing organizations. Now, Ball State maintains uniformity across all university Web sites and said it has enhanced its recruiting efforts through the site's new look and interface.

  • Bio-Key Launches Emergency Alert Platforms for Schools

    Bio-Key International has announced the release of two new emergency alert and management solutions for the education market. MobileSRO is designed specifically for the K-12 environment, while MobileCampus caters to higher education and other campus-based organizations.