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Are hackers going pro?

Ong Boon Kiat CNETAsia

Published: 28 Oct 2004 12:39 BST

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The chief scientist of security company Internet Security Systems believes 2004 could prove to be a watershed year for hacking.

Robert Graham says many hackers are graduating into the pro ranks, a development that carries worrying implications for corporate security.

"Before this year, we really saw just kids that are playing and pretending to be masterminds," said Graham, who did important early work in the development of intrusion-prevention systems. "But this year, we saw the rise of the professional hacker."

For many years, hackers were content with the thrill of breaking into other systems, or with whatever elevated peer status they achieved through their exploits. But not anymore, according to Graham, who says that both the patterns of hacker attacks, and the motives behind the attacks, are changing. Hackers are now far more coordinated, and they no longer merely rely on copycat tools and random attacks. What's more, Graham detects a dangerous intent to profit financially from hacking. He recently spoke with ZDNet UK sister site CNETAsia about this evolving security challenge.

Q: Are hackers getting paid now?
A: It's not so much that they get paid to hack, but that they earn money from hacking. Take phishing attacks: It's usually the people who are running the attacks themselves that are earning money; no one is paying them to do it.

How would you define a "pro hacker"?
Before this year, hackers really were just kids playing and pretending to be masterminds. They could download hacking utilities from the Internet, but they were really clueless. And they were relatively unskilled...and it's only after running their tools through tens of thousands of machines that they were able to find one to break into. More importantly, they weren't really criminal masterminds. It's been largely a game for hackers up until now. This is notwithstanding the fact that law enforcement agencies have been taking this game seriously -- because the hackers haven't.

This year, things are changing, and you can see it from the FBI's activities in the US this year. In one arrest by the FBI, the subject was a spammer who had thousands of machines under his control used to forward spam.

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  1. I found the article with Robert Graham being inter... Gareth Connolly
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In association with Network Liberation Movement
It seems to me this is a burden being placed on the wrong shoulders. There is not an It system in the world that can stop an individual taking information in their heads and spewing out at the nearest undesirable third party.

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