WebProNews

Tag: Crime

  • Creep Takes Woman’s Facebook Account Hostage For Nude Pics

    On one side you have Anonymous hacking into government sites and corporations under the stated purpose of social change, and then you’ve got this guy.

    John Joaquim III has been charged with first-degree criminal attempt to commit larceny by extortion and two counts of computer extortion after he held a young woman’s Facebook account hostage.

    His demands? Nude pics.

    According to WTNH in Monroe, Connecticut, Joaquim hacked into the unidentified victim’s Facebook and Gmail accounts. He then began sending her emails that stated he would only give her back control of said accounts if she sent him naked pics. Perverts these days – I tell ya. What happened to buying some binoculars and climbing a tree? Creeps have gotten lazy.

    Although the 20-year-old victim isn’t named, her friend spoke out about the incident:

    “She feels pretty violated, yeah.”

    And on the topic of what she would have done in the same situation she had this to say: “I mean, I just think that like if someone was asking me to do that like I would just not do it and make a new account.”

    Good plan. I hope her friend didn’t oblige the guy.

    It’s also unclear if Joaquim, 19, and the victim knew each other.

    The WTNH article quotes a woman who is very concerned with privacy and internet security. She says that she “changes her password constantly…that’s the only way you’re gonna be safe.” I hope she knows what kind of password to use. Many don’t as is illustrated beautifully by this XKCD comic –

    In other Facebook/crime news, the NYPD just launched an entire new unit dedicated to those idiots who post about their crimes on social networks. If this guy actually succeeded in getting the pics, do you think he would have posted them on Facebook? Probably.

    The stupid, it burns.

  • NYPD Patrols Facebook, Twitter For Idiots Who Post About Their Crimes

    Alright, so I’ll be the first to admit it. I’m notoriously hard on people who advertise their crimes on social media outlets. Let’s just say this isn’t the first time I’ve used “idiot” in the title of an article about one of these geniuses – these giants among men, trailblazing a path toward something our founding fathers could have never dreamed of: self-incrimination by Tweet.

    And it seems like the occurrences of this alarming trend are becoming more and more frequent. Remember that guy who decided to live-update his activities during the Vancouver riots? He posted on Facebook things like “threw a jersey on a burning cop car” and “burnt some smart cars.”

    A speaking of rioters, examples of clueless social media users in London have been rolling in by the minute it seems. One guy posted a photo of all his loot on Facebook. The photo even included Einstein himself, smiling in the background. And yesterday Redditors found this woman, scholar of the Queen’s English, Tweeting about her looting successes: “Got tones of stuff todayyyyy!!!!!!!!! #LondonRiots whop whop.”

    Apparently the fact that social media is becoming an investigatory goldmine isn’t lost on the New York Police Department. According to NY Daily News, the NYPD has formed a brand new unit devoted entirely to tracking crime on social media outlets like Facebook and Twitter.

    The unit will work to identify crimes both before they occur and after by searching for those who “announce plans or brag about their crimes” on the sites.

    The man running the unit is Assistant Commissioner Kevin O’Connor, a 23-year vet who is one of the NYPD’s big time gang guys. He is also known for stings involving online sexual predators.

    New York is definitely no stranger to criminals failing on Facebook. Last month we told you about the man who taunted the police via Facebook and was eventually captured. Utica police reported that he posted “Catch me if you can, I’m in Brooklyn” as a status update and was subsequently caught in an apartment…in Brooklyn.

    Facebook and Twitter have already proven valuable to the NYPD. After a man was beaten to death in an anti-gay hate crime at a house party, one of the perps bragged about it on Facebook. He’s now in jail. This incident put “house party monitoring” to the forefront of the NYPD’s tactics.

    The NY Daily also reports that a feud over diapers played out on Facebook, leading to the stabbing death of a 22-year-old woman in Brooklyn.

    It’s interesting to see law enforcement understanding truisms of the interwebs, like, people are oversharers. They’re going to talk about anything and everything, without discretion. I’m sure many departments across the country will be forming their own social media units in due time.

  • Warren Jeffs Gets Life, Twitter Takes The High Road

    Americas’ most famous polygamist was sentenced today for his previous convictions involving crimes against children at his Texas compound.

    Warren Jeffs was given life in prison for his role in the assault of two young girls who he took as “wives.” The prosecutor said that Jeffs had “corrupted and perverted” his position as an authority in his religious organization in order to “satisfy his own appetites and desires.”

    Jeffs, 55, was given life for engaging in sexual intercourse with a 12-year-old girl that he claimed as one of his wives. This conviction was obtained largely due to an audio recording of the supposed encounter.

    He was given 20 years for the sexual assault of a 15-year-old girl that the took as one of his wives. The prosecution submitted DNA evidence that proved Jeffs as the father of one of her children. He will serve the sentences consecutively.

    Jeffs, who became the leader of the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (not affiliated with the mainstream LDS church, or Mormons) when his father died in 2002. Some estimates put his total number of wives at 78-80, with over 20 of them under the age of 17.

    As you might expect, Twitter is all a-flutter about the news. And as you probably also expect, the comedians are out in full force –

    Polygamist Warren Jeffs has been sentenced to 20 years, effectively ending his bid for the GOP nomination. 2 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Heading to prison, Warren Jeffs leaves behind dozens of wives. They are rumored to now be dating Tiger Woods. 3 hours ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    The most popular joke is the polygamy/prison joke, with its many variations –

    Polygamous child-rapist Warren Jeffs gets life in prison, where the Aryans will no doubt make him into a fine Sister Wife. 1 hour ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    Don’t worry Warren Jeffs there plenty of polygamy in Prison. Dust off your wedding dress sweetie. 3 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    so Warren Jeffs got life in prison. bet it doesn’t take a week in the clink before he changes his position on monogamy 3 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Some Twitter users are against those types of jokes, however –

    Making light of prison rape, even to mock Warren Jeffs, isn’t funny. 3 minutes ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    Humor is cathartic. It’s how many people deal with serious issues. Warren Jeffs did some messed up stuff, that’s for sure. Is it alright to make light of his conviction? Did he get what he deserved? Let us know in the comments.

    [Image Courtesy CNN]

  • Idiot Taunts Cops On Facebook, Arrested Shortly Thereafter

    In the world of social media fails, it doesn’t get much better than a fugitive telling the police their general location on Facebook.

    A 29 year-old self-described rap promoter was arrested by New York Police after issuing a challenge to the law enforcement officers assigned to his capture.

    Ruben Burgos posted as his status on Facebook, “Catch me if you can, I’m in Brooklyn.”

    Police shortly found him in an apartment, sitting at his computer, with his Facebook page open in the browser.

    “He told us via Facebook to come and get him and we did,” Utica police Sgt. Steve Hauck told the Daily News.

    He apparently taunted them even more by posting a video showing him walking into a NYPD police office.

    Burgos had violated an order of protection on June 6th when he called his ex-girlfriend and threatened her, even saying that he would kill her. Charges were then filed in Utica for three counts of criminal contempt in the 1st degree and two counts of aggravated harassment in the 2nd degree.

    Before Police could arrest him, he fled to NYC. The City of Utica NY Police Department posted the story on their Facebook page a couple of days ago. The comments are hilarious, as you would expect.

    One Facebook user congratulates the PD, “What a tool! Nice job by all in the tracking and capture.” Another user writes, “moral of the story, do not poke the nice policeman with a stick.” One user simply states, “Smart move, dumbass.”

    Burgos goes by the name R. Mack Milly as a “rap mogul.” You can check out what looks to be his page on MySpace here.

    Facebook stupidity by criminals seems to be catching on, as social networks allow people exacerbate even the worst scenarios. Last month a man in Utah live-posted his standoff with Police on Facebook. He ended up shooting himself in the chest when Police finally stormed the hotel room after a more than 8-hour ordeal.

  • Chinese Gamers Sell Kids To Bankroll Their Habit

    It’s a tough world out there, and sometimes money can be tight. If you’re a young couple struggling to get by, where do you turn for a little extra cash?

    If you said “selling your children,” you are in a dark place my friend. But that’s exactly what Li Lin and Li Juan of Dongguan did. And they did it to fund their online gaming activity.

    ABC News reports out of China that according to Sanxiang City News, the young couple met back in 2007 in an internet cafe. They soon discovered that they both had a pretty strong love for online gaming.

    About a year after they met, Li Juan gave birth to a son. According to the reports, days after he was born the couple left him by himself while they traveled over 30 km away to play games at an internet cafe.

    It is unclear what particular online games captivated the couple. Possibly an MMORPG? Maybe social gaming? Whatever the games were, they required money, either for a subscription or for in-game micro transactions. Once the couple had their second child, they decided to sell the baby girl for the money to play their games. They received the equivalent of around $500 for her.

    When that went smoothly, they decided to sell their firstborn son as well. They raked in a substantially greater amount for him, somewhere around $4600.

    They then had another boy, and sold him for about $4600 as well.

    Who knows how many more children they would have made and then sold if they weren’t caught? Sure gives more meaning to the phrase “baby factory.”

    Li Lin’s mom turned them in when she found out what they were doing.

    According to ABC, when asked about their activities, the young Chinese couple replied, “We don’t want to raise them, we just want to sell them for some money.” They also said that they didn’t know they were doing anything illegal.

    Now, it wouldn’t be the first time that a story like this out of the East comes to us a little embellished. But it seems to fall in line with other stories we’ve heard recently about strange behavior when it comes to technology.

    Last month we told you about a Chinese high-school student that attempted to sell one of his kidneys on the black market in order to acquire the money to purchase an iPad2. A few weeks later, a Chinese girl attempted to sell her virginity through Weibo, China’s version of Twitter. What did she want for it? An iPhone 4.

    Those kids had it all wrong. You don’t sell parts of yourself to fuel your technology addiction, you sell your kids. I mean, you can only afford to part with a limited number of vital organs. Technically, you can make around 1.2 kids per year.

    Gaming addiction is real, folks. If this doesn’t make that abundantly clear, then I don’t know what does.

    [Image Courtesy Lungstruck Flickr Stream]

  • Casey Anthony Not Guilty, Twitter Erupts

    Casey Anthony Not Guilty, Twitter Erupts

    After a trial that lasted weeks and became a media sensation, it took a jury only 10 hours to find Casey Anthony not guilty of killing her 2-year-old daughter Caylee.

    The jury of 7 women and 5 men returned with not guilty verdicts for all the most serious charges of first-degree murder, child abuse and manslaughter of a child. The jury did find Anthony guilty of four counts of providing false information to a law enforcement officer.

    Those counts are all misdemeanors.

    To say that the verdict is shocking is an understatement. Most would agree that her fate had been sealed by the incredibly short deliberations by the jury. Common knowledge dictates that a quick verdict in a case like this usually means guilty.

    But the jury felt that the prosecution failed to prove their case on the most serious charges, and Casey Anthony will presumably go free. Her sentencing will take place Thursday morning, but she isn’t expected to serve much more jail time if any for the 4 lesser convictions. Author and lawyer Jeffery Toobin said on CNN earlier that he would be shocked if Casey Anthony is forced to serve any jail time.

    As you would expect, Twitter has erupted in a way I haven’t personally seen since Michael Jackson died. Almost every trending topic is related to the Casey Anthony decision. I think the funniest trend is “Law Abiding Citizen,” which from what I can tell is tending due to a quote from the film – “It’s not what you know, it’s what you can prove in court.” Sure seems to apply here. Check out these trending topic boxes –

    This tweet perfectly describes 99.9% of the Twitter reaction so far –

    The verdict is in: Twitter is pretty sure Casey Anthony was really guilty. 6 minutes ago via HootSuite · powered by @socialditto

    The Judicial System of America reached an all time low today with the acquittal of a mother who obviously killed her child. Sickening. 6 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    A day after we celebrated the birth of this glorious nation, the American legal system failed by letting the insidious Casey Anthony walk. 5 minutes ago via TweetDeck · powered by @socialditto

    I’m ashamed of the Orange County court system. What a disgrace to find Casey Anthony #NotGuilty 7 minutes ago via TweetCaster for Android · powered by @socialditto

    Some Twitter users are tweeting about the burden of proof, however –

    everyone mad at our judicial system, be mad at the prosecution…they had the burden and didn’t meet it. They never answered how caylee died 20 minutes ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    Bottom line on Casey Anthony: she seemed guilty, the media had convicted her, but the jury could only use what the prosecution gave them. 15 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Why are people surprised about Casey Anthony? Prosecution couldn’t make their case. It’s sad but by the law, this is how it has to happen. 33 minutes ago via Echofon · powered by @socialditto

    Then, we have the funnies (and man are there a lot of jokes to be made) –

    ME TOO!! ITS LIKE WHEN YOUR DAD HELPED GET O.J. OFF!! RT @KimKardashian: WHAT!!??!! CASEY ANTHONY NOT GUILTY!!!! I’m speechless!!! 11 minutes ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    Casey Anthony not guilty? Dexter Morgan. You know what to do. 10 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Casey Anthony. You go girl! You have three years of partying to make up for! 8 minutes ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    Maybe Casey Anthony should get OJs help in finding Caylee’s “real” killer. Fingers crossed! 33 minutes ago via Twitter for Android · powered by @socialditto

    Clearly, they weren’t sequestering this jury at a Holiday Inn Express. 38 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    RT @CaseyAnthony: Señor Frogs tonight, bitches!!!! 16 minutes ago via Echofon · powered by @socialditto

    Johnny Cochran just ghost high fived Biaz. 19 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Anyone else hoping Casey Anthony is stupid enough to sue herself for millions in a civil court? 2 minutes ago via Twitter for BlackBerry® · powered by @socialditto

    I can’t believe I live in a world where Casey Anthony will make more money than me. 4 minutes ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    Of course, amidst all the joking, it’s easy to lose sight of one part of this whole circus –

    tired of it all being about casey. rest in peace, caylee anthony. you were a beautiful little girl, and deserved better than this. 1 minute ago via web · powered by @socialditto

  • Dominique Strauss-Kahn Charges to be Dismissed, Twitter Asks the Tough Questions

    It appears that the case against former IMF head Dominique Strauss-Kahn might be coming to an end. According to the NY Post, prosecutors in the case will drop all charges within the next two weeks, possibly at his next court date.

    The case of Strauss-Kahn has fascinated people worldwide. In May, he was accused of rape and sexual assault by a 32-year-old Guinean maid at the Sofitel hotel in New York City. After these accusations he was forced out of his top position at the International Monetary Fund.

    What seemed to be a solid case has recently began to unravel. Prosecutors publicly expressed their lack of confidence in their star witness when it was found that the housekeeper has a history of falsification.

    The list of lies in the housekeeper’s past begins with the made-up story of being gang-raped and beaten in her own country in order to make herself a better candidate for political asylum.

    She also has some tax discrepancies, as she has misreported her income and claimed a child that’s not hers as a dependent on her returns.

    Although these inconsistencies are unrelated to the case and simply install doubt about her overall credibility, one mix-up does have to do with the case. It was recently found that following the alleged attack, the housekeeper lied about what she did immediately after. According to prosecutors she went to clean another room instead of fleeing into the hallway.

    Strauss-Kahn’s defense has maintained the story that the sexual encounter was consensual and that he is only guilty of soliciting a prostitute. They also claim that these accusations stem from the housekeeper’s anger at not receiving what she deemed proper payment for the sex.

    The lack of confidence the prosecutors feel has now grown into their inability to proceed with the criminal charges, according to the Post. An anonymous source inside the prosecution said that the “case is not sustainable.”

    “Her credibility is so bad now,” they said. “She is not to be believed in anything that comes out of her mouth — which is a shame, because now we may never know what happened in that hotel room.”

    The news of the probable dropping of the charges has prompted Twitter to split on two sides of the issue. On one side, some are asking whether or not lying in the past should be able to entirely discredit someone. Basically, just because she lied on her taxes, it doesn’t mean she didn’t get raped.

    So because she isn’t the ‘perfect victim’ Strauss-Kahn can get away with sexual assault? so much for #justice http://t.co/OzmFob3 58 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Charges against Dominique Strauss-Kahn to be dropped despite evidence of sexual assault as maid “lied on asylum application & tax returns” 38 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    The other side is making the case that the D.A.’s office is doing the right thing. Improper doesn’t equal criminal, they say. Just because Strauss-Kahn might be an unsavory figure, it doesn’t mean he committed a crime.

    People v. Dominique Strauss-Kahn: anecdotes are not data, and not every sleazy character is a criminal. http://on.wsj.com/iwL8Xu 1 hour ago via LaterBro.com · powered by @socialditto

    DSK case reminds us that just b/c someone makes you say EWWW, they are not necessarily a criminal. Remind me of Ben Roethlisberger’s saga. 22 minutes ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Some, of course, are simply taking the time to make light of the whole case –

    Looks like the US celebrating it’s freedom rubbed off on Strauss-Kahn. 1 hour ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    Thank God Dominique Strauss-Kahn didn’t send that maid photos of his penis – then he’d be in real trouble. 2 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone · powered by @socialditto

    In the wake of new allegations against Strauss-Kahn, Pepe Le Pew has been charged with stalking, harassment & abuse of the French language. 2 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    That last tweet refers to the fact that it may not be over for DSK. A French writer named Tristane Banon is expected to file a criminal complaint that accuses Strauss-Kahn of trying to sexually assault her during an interview in 2003.

    What do you think about the DSK case? Let us know in the comments.

  • British Security Firm Offers To Thwart Burglars With Scheduled Social Media Updates

    We’ve all heard the line that Facebook is the best thing to happen to burglars since the crowbar. Since people (a) are oversharers by nature and (b) rarely think about anything before they act, it won’t take a thorough search to find one of your friends bragging about how they just landed in Germany or how they are off to the beach for a week.

    And why shouldn’t they tell their Facebook friends and Twitter followers that news? That’s what social media is for, right? Being social?

    But of course there is always the worry that someone will see your vacation statuses and think it is the right time to break into your house. A security firm in the UK says it will give you piece of mind when you’re away by implementing a series of faux-Facebook posts and tweets to create the illusion that you are still at home.

    Think of it as the internet’s equivalent of leaving a light on, or leaving a car in the driveway. Or settling up an elaborate fake party with mannequins and a life-sized Michael Jordan cardboard cutout traversing your living room on a train set – you know, whatever applies to you.

    Precreate Solutions company director Gary Jackson had this to say to the Telegraph

    “Putting up a Facebook posting of photographs on a beach to 300-400 ‘friends’ is like leaving an advert on your door to a burglar telling him when you will be out.”

    Apparently, a significant number of Precreate’s clients reported robberies while on vacation after announcing the details of their trip on Facebook and Twitter. So the company decided that they would begin posting pre-approved status updates and tweets while their clients are away – for a small fee of course.

    So while I’m gone, I can pay someone to post things like “Snuggling up on my couch for a late night movie!” on my social media accounts. Because I don’t have access to the internet and can’t post fake updates myself?

    This is obviously just one of the problems with this kind of service. Would it mean that I have to abstain from posting anything about my vacation? It would kind of give up the rouse if right above the tweet about unloading groceries or something there was a photo of me drinking mai tais on the beach.

    Plus, with privacy settings and all, I can limit the flow of information to a select few people. And if your inner circle contains someone who would rob you blind while you’re away, you probably need to watch who you friend on Facebook.

    And as TNW points out, if you really don’t want to be obligated to fake-update your social media statuses whilst you’re away, something like HootSuite will let you schedule updates for a future time.

    Precreate’s Jackson seems to think there could be some other benefits to employing his service. “It’s getting to the point now when insurance firms are going charge higher premiums for social media users,” he says. Great. Just because I drive a red sports car, smoke a pack a day and overshare on Facebook, I’m going to have to pay higher premiums.

    Having said all of that, it is an interesting idea. Do you think it is possible that it could catch on? Let us know what you think.

  • Utah Man Posts Police Standoff Play-by-Play on Facebook

    Don’t let a pesky standoff with the police keep you from social media – Jason Valdez didn’t.

    The 36-year-old man from Salt Lake City, UT holed himself up in a motel room for 16 hours with what police call a hostage. During the standoff, Valdez made sure to let his Facebook friends know how it was going. He made six status updates from about 1:23 am to 9:25 am on June 18th, all while surrounded by SWAT teams.

    Here is his first Facebook post, notifying his friends about his current predicament –

    One minute later he posted “Sorry I meant to put opd….” a correction of “old.” Valdez is referring to the Ogden Police Department

    About forty minutes later, he posted this –

    Valdez claimed that the girl with him inside the motel room was not a hostage, but with him willingly. He then posted photos of him with the girl inside the room. He captioned the one below “Got a cute ‘HOSTAGE’, huh?” From the photos, at least, she doesn’t look to be under too much duress. But we all know a picture can be quite deceiving.

    About 5 hours after posting the photos, Valdez said this –

    And then two hours after that, his final Facebook communication –

    About an hour and a half after this post, police stormed the room. Valdez shot himself in the chest and is now in critical condition.

    Some of his Facebook friends even tried to warn Valdez about police movements. Apparently one friend posted on his wall “gunner in the bushes stay low.” That post has since been removed. Police haven’t said whether or not they will consider this sort of action a crime. It could be seen as obstruction of justice I guess.

    Valdez kept communication with the people posting on his wall as well. A girl identifying herself as his sister posted “I love you brother, get your head right and ten yrs, is not a thing, me and kids love you, be smart.” Valdez replied “Love u always sis.”

    His wall is now mostly being used by friends to post get well messages and prayers. One friend has posted “Hey Jason, im praying for u. god is wit u. listen to him. much love.”

    One response to that post – “You friend is a retarded f*ck, kind regards from Norway.”

    Oh, Facebook.

  • PlayStation Network Hackers Arrested in Spain

    It looks like the first arrests in the April PlayStation Network hack have been made. The Spanish National Police say that they have detained three people – one man and two of unknown gender – in connection with the attacks that prompted Sony to shut down its online gaming service for over a month.

    The NYT reports that the three people have all been identified as “local leadership” in hacktivist group Anonymous. One of the detained is a 31-year-old man who has been the target of an investigation stretching back to October of 2010. That investigation was started after hackers targeted the Spanish Ministry of Culture’s website.

    From the NYT:

    He had a computer server in his apartment in the northern port city of Gijón, from which the group attacked the Web sites of the Sony PlayStation online gaming store.

    The same computer was also employed in coordinated cyberattacks against two Spanish banks, BBVA and Bankia, the Italian energy company Enel, as well as government sites in Spain, Egypt, Algeria, Libya, Iran, Chile, Colombia and New Zealand, the police said.

    When the original PSN hack occurred Sony hinted that Anonymous was responsible, citing their prior conflicts with the group and a “We are Legion” file left behind by the hackers.

    Anonymous quickly responded with an online letter of sorts. They said that the “We are Legion” file was a plant, put there to implicate Anonymous. They also hinted that by blaming them, Sony was simply attempting to cover up for their own failings. They also provided this argument, stating that it was against what they stood for to tamper with credit card info, as it was hinted that the PSN hackers did:

    In the realm of criminal investigation, there is an important aspect of investigations that should never be overlooked. The “modus operandi” of a criminal rarely changes. Whoever did perform the credit card theft did so contrary to the “modus operandi” and intention of Anonymous. Public support is not gained by stealing credit card info and personal identities, we are trying to fight criminal activities by corporations and governments, not steal credit cards.

    Later, some veteran members of Anonymous spoke out about the attacks. They said that just because Anonymous didn’t officially sanction the hacks, it doesn’t mean that members of Anonymous weren’t responsible:

    If you say you are Anonymous, and do something as Anonymous, then Anonymous did it. Just because the rest of Anonymous might not agree with it, doesn’t mean Anonymous didn’t do it.

    This news comes just days after a BBC interview with Sony’s Computer Entertainment Chief Kaz Hirai. In that interview, he said that Sony may never know who orchestrated the attacks that brought down the PSN.

    With regard to the 100 million [compromised] accounts, we do know the information was accessed, we don’t know however what part of the 100 million accounts were taken from our servers. For example, it might be 100 million first names, it might be 100 million last four digits of a phone number, it could be the entire account information, we just don’t know, but I think the people that intruded our systems were very good in hiding their tracks as they left our systems, so we may not know for a very long time or we may never know.

  • Facebook Troll Sentenced in Australian Court

    This extends far beyond your basic rick roller or “first” commenter.

    Today, Self-titled “troll” Bradley Paul Hampson, a 29 year old Brisbane resident, plead guilty to the possession and distribution of child exploitation material as well as using the internet to menace, harass or cause offense.  Hampson was sentenced to three years in jail, which was lowered to 1 year by the judge.  He’s already served 7  months behind bars, so he should be out in September.

    Hampson trolled the Facebook pages dedicated to two dead children last February, shopping pictures to include insensitive and profane images as well as posting comments to the page under an assumed name.  He chose to post as an old schoolmate, who he said had been bullied as a child, according to the Brisbane Times.

    On the Facebook page for a dead 12 year old boy, Hampson posted pictures of the child with “w00t I’m dead” written across his face as well as inside a woodchipper, blood spray and all.  On the page for a dead 8 year old girl, he implied that he raped and killed her, saying “My definition of pleasure… listening to her ribs crack. I got mad … so I murdered her.”

    Uh, not cool dude.

    When the officials searched his personal computer, they found more shopped photos, including ones of two dead British children with penises superimposed on their faces.

    Mr. Hampson becomes the second high profile case of a Facebook troll landing hard time for their work.  Just last October, a Manchester man was jailed for posting that he had sex with the dead bodies of Big Brother star Jane Goody and a boy mauled by a dog on their Facebook tribute pages.  He was convicted through the Communications Act that the Parliament passed in 2003 which prohibits “malicious communications” on the internet.

    It is undeniable that the actions of these trolls are in incredibly poor taste and are not funny in the slightest, but just how criminal are they?  In Australia and England, apparently quite criminal.  In a related but not exactly comparable case, an American woman was cleared after being accused of causing the suicide of a young girl through Myspace bullying.  Is being mean really a crime?  Do these actions go far enough beyond meanness and distaste that they require punishment by the law?
    Tell us what you think.

  • Zeus Trojan Arrests Show Cybercriminals Getting More Vulnerable

    Federal and state authorities have reportedly charged over 60 people in connection with a global cybercrime scheme using the Zeus Trojan to steal millions of dollars from U.S. bank accounts. Trusteer, a secure browsing service, which claims to be in use by over 12 million online banking customers and protects over 70 banks, shared some commentary on the news with WebProNews. The company says it has deep visibility into criminal activity and the Zeus trojan. 

    "The recent arrests in the US and the UK indicate that financial fraud is not the business of individuals," says Trusteer CEO Mickey Boodaei. "Behind these operations you can find groups of people which in many cases operate for larger organized crime groups. They have the money and the means to run large scale sustainable criminal online operations. As time goes we’re seeing more groups which are larger than before, more efficient and knowledgeable than before, and as a result much more successful than before."

    Mickey Boodaei, CEO of Trusteer "However, recent successful arrests in the US and the UK show that law enforcement, with the help of the banks, their customers, and the industry, are capable of tracing these people down and get them behind bars," he adds. "More efforts are needed for this good start to become truly successful. Financial fraud can be stopped from spreading if financial organizations and customers continue to improve security and work with law enforcement to go after cyber criminals."

    "These arrests show that some of the criminal groups behind Zeus are doing a poor job in covering their tracks," Boodaei continues. "The police did a great job in tracing down this group and gathering information that can facilitate their arrest. This is not a simple task and I’ve heard many people saying that this is almost impossible due to the level of sophistication from criminals and the complication of the justice system. However, this week’s crackdowns in the UK and now in the US, along with a few others that preceded them show that this can be achieved."

    Trusteer and some other organizations have actually been involved in an initiative in which they were able to penetrate the criminals’ servers and gather a lot of evidence, Boodaei tells us. "This shows that criminals are vulnerable," he says. 

    "By running more operations like this and by the banks and other organizations investing effort in tracing fraudsters and not just blocking their activities, there is a good chance we can lower the volumes of attacks," says Boodaei. "Customers can take their banks’ advice and implement fraud prevention tools that provide valuable capabilities to banks in detecting and blocking these threats. By working together we can definitely stop this threat from growing."

    According to PCWorld, the Zeus software is sold in black market forums and there are over a dozen Zeus gangs in operation around the world.

  • Is Censoring Craigslist the Right Way to Go?

    Update: The EFF has weighed in on the topic, talking about what the censoring means for free speech.

    Craigslist has removed the censored box, and the adult section is just gone entirely.

    Original Article: As you may have read by now, Craigslist has censored its "adult services" section. This appears to stem from a combination of pressure from numerous state attorneys general and negative media exposure. The issue at hand:  prostitution and human trafficking being solicited through the site. 

    The situation brings to mind the conviction of Google execs over content uploaded to Google-owned YouTube, which led us to asking if social media sites should be held accountable for user actions.  Should Craigslist be held responsible? Comment here.

    Craiglist opted to display a "censored" bar over the "adult services" category, caving to the pressure to remove it, while also making it obvious that its not really what they wanted to do. They could’ve simply removed it. Craigslist clearly feels attacked. Some have even suggested that the move was made to influence public opinion. 

    Some are coming at the story raising questions about free speech, and while that is one issue, not even all supporters of online free speech find this to be the real issue at hand. Microsoft Research Senior Researcher Danah Boyd wrote a lengthy editorial on the subject for the Huffington Post in which she comes to Craigslist defense (as a service provider, not for censoring the section). Boyd, who claims to be a victim of abuse herself, makes the case that censoring Craigslist does more to add to the problem than to help solve it, saying that it helps the abusers. 

    "The Internet has changed the dynamics of prostitution and trafficking, making it easier for prostitutes and traffickers to connect with clients without too many layers of intermediaries," she writes. "As a result, the Internet has become an intermediary, often without the knowledge of those internet service providers (ISPs) who are the conduits. This is what makes people believe that they should go after ISPs like Craigslist. Faulty logic suggests that if Craigslist is effectively a digital pimp who’s profiting off of online traffic, why shouldn’t it be prosecuted as such?"

    "The problem with this logic is that it fails to account for three important differences," Boyd continues. "1) most ISPs have a fundamental business — if not moral — interest in helping protect people; 2) the visibility of illicit activities online makes it much easier to get at, and help, those who are being victimized; and 3) a one-stop-shop is more helpful for law enforcement than for criminals. In short, Craigslist is not a pimp, but a public perch from which law enforcement can watch without being seen."

    Craigslist censors adult services section

    Boyd elaborates on each of these points in the article. Despite the censoring, Craigslist appears to agree with Boyd.  

    "The law is on craigslist’s side – websites are not liable for content posted by users under section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. But craigslist has given up anyway," says Adrianne Jeffries at ReadWriteWeb. "It’s not because its owners want to prevent sex trafficking – craigslist has maintained that it does more harm than good because law enforcement agencies can use it just as easily as pimps can."

    There has been a lot of criticism about how the media has covered the story in general, with Craigslist itself probably being the harshest critic. CNN’s Amber Lyon recently interviewed Craigslist founder Craig Newmark, apparently catching him off guard on the subject. In a post at The Faster Times, Newmark says:

    Amber approached me after an event where I had just spoken about stuff like getting real support for our troops and veterans — a cause I care about and support whenever I can. She said because “I’m the Craig in craigslist,” she expected me to have all the answers on the spot about anything to do with the company. Well, I don’t. Jim Buckmaster, our CEO, has been running craigslist for the last 10 years. I am a customer service rep, and I still love being connected to our users and trying to help people. But I have no role in managing the company’s operations because basically (a) I suck as a manager, and (b) while overall company direction matters to me as founder and a board director,  the deal was to hire good, trustworthy people and then get outta the way.
    If Amber had done her homework, she would have known ambushing me with questions I am not qualified to answer, or even the right person to ask, would not get CNN’s viewers the accurate information they deserve.

    Buckmaster also posted a letter to Lyon on the company blog, criticizing her approach. In this clip, Lyon says Craigslist isn’t living up to its promise of filtering ads, and offers a rebuttal to Craigslist accusations that  she "ambushed" Newmark (though doesn’t mention the part about him not running the company).  Since the Newmark interview, there has been no shortage of media coverage of Craigslist, though as Jeffries and Lyon both note, Craigslist itself is no longer talking. 

    Craigslist had another blog post up recently criticizing the notion that alternatives to Craigslist are any better for preventing human trafficking. The post was a response to a Facebook Page based on that notion, indicating that eBay was such an alternative. The post goes on to discuss examples of ads that would contradict that notion.  In Boyd’s piece, she compared the whole thing to a game of whack-a-mole, suggesting that if you censor one site, the content will simply pop up on another one. 

    Is censoring Craigslist the answer? Share your thoughts.

  • Implications of New Gowalla Feature, Facebook Gift Cards

    Gowalla has launched a new feature called "highlights" which it describes as "little rewards you can give to places that are important to your life". MG Siegler talks about the potential significance of such a feature.

    "Where this gets really interesting is when you bring the social graph into it," he writes. "So, for example, if I check-in near a spot where a friend of mine asked his wife to marry him, I’ll get a message alerting me of that. Or if I’m looking for the best taco place in Austin, Texas, I can visit the Highlight page and see what the masses are voting for. There are a lot of potentially interesting uses for this when it starts to get populated with a lot of data."

    As reported, Target is going to start selling Facebook Credits gift cards. SFGate.com has an interesting article about the implications of this, in terms of Facebook securing.

    Wired looks at today’s story about a man who took hostages at the Discovery Channel’s headquarters in Maryland, and posted his demands to the web, on his site savetheplanetprotest.com – the text is still available in cached form here.

    Apple announced a bunch of new things today. You may have heard. Here’s a summary.

    iTunes 10

    Michael Arrington has an interesting piece about how Google has lost 118 employees to Facebook, and how the company makes counteroffers to those employees receive offers from Facebook.

    Marshall Kirkpatrick at ReadWriteWeb talks about why Alcatel-Lucent acquiring OpenPlug is big news.

    Henry Blodget at Silicon Alley Insider reports that South Korea’s Naver has taken search in-house. Unfortunately for Yahoo (and Microsoft), it has been Yahoo’s biggest search affiliate, according to Blodget.

  • Murders Organized Using Facebook

    From time to time, we get a reminder of the true power of social media, and the fact that sometimes that power is used by evildoers. The latest example comes a CNN report about a Facebook "hit list".

    According to CNN’s Arthur Brice, three teenagers in Columbia, who were on a 69-name hit list posted on Facebook, have been murdered in the past ten days. He reports:

    The hit list on Facebook, which was posted August 17, gave the people named three days to leave the town of Puerto Asis or be executed, said Volmar Perez Ortiz, a federal official whose title is defender of the public.

    Police at first thought the posting was a joke, Perez said in a statement issued Saturday. But the publication of a second list with 31 additional names led authorities to convene a special security meeting Friday, Perez said.

    Brice has more details about the crimes.

    The Facebook format used for the hit list is unclear, and the company did not respond to a request for comment.

    This is not the first time we’ve seen social media abused, and it will almost certainly not be the last, but while a site like Facebook may provide a platform for threats, it’s important to keep in mind that it is only the platform, and a platform that is utilized much more often for good will (see the countless causes on the social network).

    Facebook Connects People - Some People are Evil

    It’s simply a means of communication. This is another example of why social media sites should not be held accountable for the actions of users (a problem YouTube has struggled with). Would you hold a paper company or the post office responsible for a handwritten hit list sent through the mail?

  • Thieves Rip Finger Flesh Off iPad Buyer

    In Denver, a man bought an iPad for a friend at the Apple Store in Cherry Creek Mall, but soon after had it stolen by thieves, who ripped the flesh off his finger while taking it.

    The victim, Bill Jordan, told local media he had the cords of the bag tied around his hand, and when one of the thieves yanked it, he couldn’t let go, and it literally tore the flesh off his finger, leaving nothing but bone.

    "I never hear it coming, I never see it coming," he told Denver’s FOX31. "I just remember this kid pulling and pulling and pulling and it got caught?took the flesh right off, the tendons and everything. There was nothing but bone." A doctor told him they’d have to amputate the finger.

     

    At this point the two thieves are still out there as police continue the search. Denver’s’ CBS4 has a quote from Jordan, telling the thieves, "I hope you understand what you’ve done to my life and my family’s life for a simple piece of apparatus that’ll be junk in a couple of years."

    We know there is a great amount of iPad demand in the U.S. (they’ve postponed releasing it overseas for this reason), but this is ridiculous. Looking past the sick outcome of this crime, Jordan is absolutely right as well. The first generation iPad won’t be so in demand two years from now.

  • Facebook Users Set Up Fan Group(s) for Suicide Pilot

    Update: Ok, make that multiple Facebook groups…(via Business Insider)

    Original Article: By now, you’ve probably heard the news that Joseph Andrew Stack intentionally flew a plane into an IRS building in Austin, Texas. He appeared to have left a rant at EmbeddedArt.com before he did it, but the site has since been taken offline, and replaced with the following message:

    This website has been taken offline due to the sensitive nature of the events that transpired in Texas this morning and in compliance with a request from the FBI. To see an archived version of the original letter, please go here: http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/years/2010/0218102stack1.html. Please visit our forum if you wish to discuss anything related to this incident: Texas crash pilot left suicide note on Web site – embeddedart.com.

    Regards,
    T35 Hosting – www.T35.com

    Stack has already had a Facebook Fan Group set up in his "honor" by people admiring what he has done. At the time of this writing, it already has over 160 fans. Some on the page are praising what he did, while others are calling him and his fans names. Social media at its finest.

    Stack Facebook Group

    On an interesting side note, Google doesn’t appear to be displaying its real-time search results for "Austin" or "Texas". I just find this slightly odd, being how it is one of the day’s biggest news stories. To be fair, the results do show up for queries like "IRS", "plane", and "crash". This shows another example of where the feature still has some room for improvement.