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Programming Security Worms Technology

German Teen Charged with Creating Sasser 325

nomoreself writes "Sven Jaschan, only 18 years old, has been indicted by prosecutors in Verden, Germany for allegedly releasing the well known Sasser worm. The PC World article has the details, including the fact that Microsoft's $250,000 reward offer was responsible for informants' coming forth with Jaschan's name, and that Jaschan has actually already confessed to writing several versions of Netsky, as well as the worm in question. Surprisingly enough, the 143 victims that have filed charges are only claiming $158,000 worth of damages." You might remember when he was first arrested back in May.
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German Teen Charged with Creating Sasser

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  • Only 18? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:00PM (#10207786)
    Boohoo. You do the crime, you serve the time.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:34PM (#10208063)
      It's good that they got this guy.

      Now if someone will just offer a reward for catching whoever it was that lanched the years-long-now denial-of-service attack on Java applets.

      The attackers posted something about "killing cross-platform Java by growing the polluted Java market." Apparently, their goal was to make it impossible to create trustworthy Java applets, by making it impossible for a website developer to predict whether the JVM client was compatible or not.

      This DOS attack has been very successful in making people afraid to use Java applets. It has been one of the most costly DOS attacks in the history of the Internet. I really hope they can identify and charge the attackers.
  • Smarts? (Score:5, Funny)

    by wo1verin3 ( 473094 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:01PM (#10207788) Homepage
    You'd think people smart enough to do something like this would be smart enough to shut their mouths. :)
    • Re:Smarts? (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Jason1729 ( 561790 )
      The main reason they do it is for bragging rights.

      Jason
      ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
    • Re:Smarts? (Score:5, Funny)

      by eingram ( 633624 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:07PM (#10207856)
      It's this part that gets 'em:
      /* Sasser worm version 2!
      by Sven Jaschan (sjaschan@mailservice.com) */
      Doh! ;)
    • Re:Smarts? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by servognome ( 738846 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:10PM (#10207877)
      Not necessarily, it depends on why the person does something like this. In most cases the psychological reasons for creating a worm/virus, also would make the person want to brag about their accomplishment.
      Maybe they do it because they want to show off their skills and boost their ego. In most cases people aren't happy knowing they are the greatest in the world, they want everybody else to affirm that feeling so they brag about their accomplishment to get recognition. Maybe they do it to get revenge, and they want those suffering to know who is causing the pain.
      I think more than likely the person would end up talking. Just a few drinks at the bar and they might open up about their great accomplishment to uninterested patrons.
      • Re:Smarts? (Score:3, Funny)

        by Coupons ( 793098 )
        Just a few drinks at the bar and they might open up about their great accomplishment to uninterested patrons.

        I had a landlady like that. After a few drinks, she told me in great detail how she had cleverly killed her husband in an untracable manner.

        "What else could I do?", she said. "I'm Catholic. I couldn't get a divorce."

    • Re:Smarts? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward
      Have you SEEN how easy it is to exploit some of these bugs? Some require programming knowledge, but some only require a little Javascript or HTML.

      It rarely takes brains to exploit a vulnerability. It takes brains to FIND the vulnerability (er, usually), and it takes brains to exploit the vulnerability WELL.

      This guy is the dictionary definition of a script kiddie. A little knowledge, a lot of ego.
    • Re:Smarts? (Score:5, Funny)

      by stephanruby ( 542433 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @09:31PM (#10208504)
      You'd think kids smart enough to do something like this would be smart enough to get caught before their 18th birthdays.
    • Re:Smarts? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by DustMagnet ( 453493 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @09:51PM (#10208684) Journal
      You'd think people smart enough to do something like this would be smart enough to shut their mouths. :)

      Smart?

      Do people here really think writing worms is a sign if being smart? I don't. Only a total loser would do something so mean and stupid.

      Does it take some skill? Sure, not everyone can do it, but it's far easier to destroy than it is to build. It's like burning down your neighbor's house to prove you understand fire.

    • Re:Smarts? (Score:5, Funny)

      by badman99 ( 674229 ) <brimble@ho t m ail.com> on Thursday September 09, 2004 @10:25PM (#10208973)
      Something tells me this kid is gunna learn a whole lot more about back doors while in jail.
      • by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 10, 2004 @12:48AM (#10209818)
        I saw this story on the front page and thought, "I wonder how many comments before someone makes a reference to prison rape." It was 14, and modded +4 Funny. Forgive the generalization, but what is the deal with Americans and prison rape? Every single time prison is mentioned (and most of the time criminals are mentioned), someone pipes up about men raping other men. I can understand the occasional reference, but this is obsessive. It's creepy.
        • by Scarblac ( 122480 ) <slashdot@gerlich.nl> on Friday September 10, 2004 @04:42AM (#10210606) Homepage

          but what is the deal with Americans and prison rape?

          Apparently, the problem of prison rape is so real in the US, that it is actually one of the worst aspects of going to jail. 1 in 10 males in prison are raped, according to this fact sheet [spr.org].

          Being from Europe (like I assume you are), this sort of thing is completely unbelievable, but there you are.

          • Why do you find it so unbelievable?

            As an American, I find it unbelievable that Americans are so puritanical about all things related to.... um... sex.

            Straight American males are generally obsessed about any perception of them being slightly gay or interested in anything homoerotic.

            Look at the scandal over a president's affair.

            Now given the righteous condemnation of anything sexual, and probably lack of any experimentation, should you really be surprised?
          • As a criminology student, we went to a state prison in Fl. A muscular inmate said something to the extent of "In jail you don't have to worry about becoming gay, the other inmates make that choice for you"

            It is a large problem in institutions, both men's and women's, although in women's prisons they often tend to form whole families, with two taking on the role of parents and other taking of the role of children. It was really fascinating to study.
    • Re:Smarts? (Score:4, Funny)

      by gnovos ( 447128 ) <gnovos@ c h i p p e d . net> on Friday September 10, 2004 @06:23AM (#10210891) Homepage Journal
      I don't know... maybe he can claim the reward, pay off the damages, and end up the winner for his troubles.
  • Wow. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by evslin ( 612024 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:01PM (#10207789)
    Lucky, 143 plantiffs seeking only 158,000 in damages. Over here that kid would have been sued for 158,000,000!
    • Re:Wow. (Score:2, Funny)

      by penguinoid ( 724646 )
      Lucky, 143 plantiffs seeking only 158,000 in damages. Over here that kid would have been sued for 158,000,000!

      So, that means he files for "less" bankrupcy than he would here?
    • by k98sven ( 324383 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:34PM (#10208064) Journal
      In most of the (western) world, the damages awarded by courts are pretty down-to-earth.

      It's the USA with its runaway legal system which is the sad exception to the rule.

      As an american living in europe.. it's nice to see a court system work the way it's supposed to: As a last resort when you can't sort things out between yourselves, and where the damages you receive can only be expected to recover your losses, not make you a profit.

    • Re:Wow. (Score:5, Funny)

      by Bombcar ( 16057 ) <racbmob@@@bombcar...com> on Thursday September 09, 2004 @11:15PM (#10209338) Homepage Journal
      By my calculation, he could have turned himself in and made $92,000!

      (250,000-158,000)
  • Spy/Ad Ware (Score:5, Funny)

    by aceat64 ( 706106 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:01PM (#10207796)
    Now if only we could figure out a bounty system to kill off those spyware and adware guys....
    • Re:Spy/Ad Ware (Score:5, Insightful)

      by LostCluster ( 625375 ) * on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:05PM (#10207830)
      Unfortuantely, those spyware/adware people have a bounty system keeping them in existant... why else would they pull our data our push out ads? Somebody's paying them somehow.
    • Now if only we could figure out a bounty system to kill off those spyware and adware guys....

      One word: assasins. They would do it for cheep as the US government 0wn0rz the asses of several unemployed assasins *shudder*
    • I think the satisfaction in putting them out of business would be enough.

      Why isn't anyone writing a good worm for a change? One that would install itself on the computers of the clueless and destroy their malware. It would roam the internet as an autonomous wave of malware mutilation jacking into networks of its own establishment to retrieve new signature files.

      Oh man, now I wish I knew a damn thing about how Windows works so I could go write that monster . . . . . .
    • Re:Spy/Ad Ware (Score:3, Interesting)

      by stor ( 146442 )
      My god yeah.

      The designer at my work came in one day and said her machine was running slow. She runs Norton AntiVirus and scans regularly. I asked her whether there were any strange Pop-Ups or browser redirections. She said "Yeah! How do I stop that?"

      I said "You're computer is infested with Spyware. Install AdAware and Spybot: Search and Destroy"

      She came back to me a couple of days later with a sheepish grin on her face and asked me to guess how many adbots/tracking cookies, etc were installed. I said, "O
  • Its not a crime! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by cato kaze ( 770158 ) <omletNO@SPAMmagi-n.com> on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:02PM (#10207797)
    Or so /.ers will claim. His program caused people to lose money. I don't care if it was linus torvalds himself, anyone who writes a program with the intent to do damage to systems, even though they are unpatched, should still be prosecuted to the full extent of the law and be made to pay. It IS a crime.

    (Not meant as flaimbait or a troll, just staving off posts in his defence)
    • anyone who writes a program with the intent to do damage to systems, even though they are unpatched, should still be prosecuted to the full extent of the law and be made to pay. It IS a crime

      Let the "let's sue Micro$oft" jokes begin!
    • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:19PM (#10207951)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Re:"The System" (Score:4, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:53PM (#10208188)

          "Call me very Kantian..."

          Actually you're not very Kantian, and your misguided ethics might even stem from a gross misunderstanding of those ethics.

          Remember that Kantian ethics does not support consequentialism in any way. The morality of an action is directly linked to that action's motivations, not to its consequences or indeed even its legality. Korsgaard [amazon.com] has a lot to say about how many of Kant's conclusions as written (such as the famous one where he declares it immoral to lie to save a friend's life) can be "blocked by his own procedures."

          If you think that you should be punished for stealing to feed your family the same way someone should be punished for stealing to feed a crack habit, you have a serious problem discerning between what is "legal" and what is "right." No matter the capitalistic filth that has been shoved down your throat by "the man," socialism was not founded on principles of lazy people leeching off of the community. It's about taking from those with an overabundance and giving to those who lack. It's about charity and love and most of all respect for humanity.

          The law should serve humanity, not humanity the law.

        • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

          by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @09:03PM (#10208268)
          Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Re:"The System" (Score:5, Insightful)

          by metlin ( 258108 ) * on Thursday September 09, 2004 @09:29PM (#10208475) Journal

          Score -1, Arrogant, ignorant and stupid troll.

          Wrong is wrong. There are no grey areas. Its a boolean function. its right, its wrong. Nothing else.

          Sure, it's easy for you to say that - sitting in the comforts of your home with an Internet connection and time to kill on a discussion site.

          But I bet that the several people who watch their children die of hunger or poverty would bet to differ.

          I can understand malevolent people exist, but a large chunk of them are driven to it by the *society* we live in. Rather, the lousy excuse for a society that we live in.

          One of my friend works for an international aid agency. Maybe you should see some of the pictures of people worn by war, strife, poverty and diseases.

          There is NO right and NO wrong. It is ALL a perspective. When you are on the street with nothing to call your own, stealing is NOT wrong or right - it becomes a necessity. You do not have the luxury of morals when it is a question of survival for you and your loved ones.

          If water were made a commodity, and if people died of thirst because they could not buy it, would you consider STEALING water to live a crime? If air were made a commodity, and people died because they could not buy air, would you consider stealing air a crime? It's a survival instinct, you cannot cull millions of years of evolution because of some cock-and-bull morals that you conjured up for yourself.

          Narrow-minded and prejudiced thoughts like this make me want to puke. Sheesh.
          • Re:"The System" (Score:3, Insightful)

            by goldspider ( 445116 )
            I'm still waiting for the part where you explain the need that prompted this upstanding citizen to write a malicious worm, or the evils that society committed against him that forced his hand.

            The boundaries of 'right' and 'wrong can blur when necessity comes into play, but can you apply your moral relativism to cases such as this where there is no good served or need met?
        • Re:"The System" (Score:2, Insightful)

          by g-doo ( 714869 )
          While I don't agree with the boolean function analogy, I do agree with you that stealing to feed one's family does not make it okay. This reminds me of something else than disturbs me - that there are people who think that it's okay to steal from someone with a fairly large amount of wealth (like music artists or CEOs of disliked companies). Just because a music artists' income is much higher than the average income, doesn't mean that they don't deserve every penny they earn. I've heard many people say,
          • Re:"The System" (Score:4, Insightful)

            by moonbender ( 547943 ) <moonbenderNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Thursday September 09, 2004 @10:34PM (#10209042)
            If we just replace the act of "stealing" with "murdering", then it would put things in clearer perspective.

            It also totally changes the meaning. You can't just interchange the two to make a point. Obviously most people would answer your question with a no, but that really has no ramifications for the justification of stealing. BTW, this goes both ways, too: Is it okay to violate the speed limit to feed your starving family?

            So maybe stealing to feed your family is not totally okay. I don't think anybody said it was, because the original point was that moral evaluation is not boolean. So it's not totally okay (whatever that means; perhabs nothing really is) but it's more okay than stealing for no good reason at all, and a lot more okay than killing to feed your family, which in turn would be more okay than killing for no good reason at all. Arguably. :)
        • Wrong is wrong. There are no grey areas. Its a boolean function. its right, its wrong. Nothing else.

          I agree! I also think there is exactly one principle to determine whether something is right or wrong. That principle is: Does it cause more suffering than happiness? If so, it is wrong. If not, it is right. All valid ethics follow from this principle.

          So quite plainly, if respecting property "rights" causes more suffering than it does happiness that would be unethical. The purpose of these mores that do
          • Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • Does it cause more suffering than happiness?

            That's kind of interesting. I don't know how applicable it is though, especially if you try to communicate your own conclusions based on this to others. Which is kind of an important point when it comes to moral systems.

            First off, are you basing this on actual consequences or intended consequences? I might have the best intentions and inadvertently hurt someone. Does that make me a bad person? And vice versa, someone engaged in what would typically be called a
        • Re:"The System" (Score:2, Insightful)

          by UserGoogol ( 623581 )
          No, morality is, in its simplest possible state, a map to the reals. (Although I suspect the math gets even more complicated than that.) Every action has a certain degree of goodness to it. For example, stealing is bad, but it's better than murder. So if stealing can prevent a murder, you should do so.

          Boolean rule-based morality is useful because it's very easy to understand and spread to others (memes) but I don't think it's the true nature of right and wrong.
      • Now I'm not saying this guy was writing viruses to feed his starving family

        Actually, while "starving" is probably not accurate, several of the reports [cnn.com] from back in May did make mention of Sven claiming his motivation was to drum up business for his mother's PC Help business.

      • by Anonymous Coward
        "So is stealing bread to feed your starving family."

        Nice use of the Fat Tony defense

        Bart: "Are you guys crooks?"
        Fat Tony: "Put it this way. It is wrong to steal a loaf of bread for a starving family?"
        Bart: "No."
        Fat Tony: "What if you steal a truckload of break."
        Bart: "No."
        Fat Tony: "What if your family doesn't like bread? What if they like cigarettes?"
        Bart: "I guess not."

      • Re:"The System" (Score:3, Insightful)

        by zangdesign ( 462534 )
        There are a couple of problems with your argument (quoting non-existent characters in a serious argument aside):

        1. Stealing bread to feed your family in no way compares to writing a virus and intentionally releasing it. One is a benevolent crime, the other is malevolent. Apples and oranges, dude. Apples and oranges.

        2. While "legal" doesn't necessarily equate to "right" or "ethical", it's still legal and therefore not prosecutable in a court of criminal law. In order for laws to be "right", you have to cha
    • Re:Its not a crime! (Score:3, Interesting)

      by glpierce ( 731733 )
      Writing a virus is not a crime. Writing a virus with the intent to cause harm is (ditto for negligence letting it get out). Don't expect him to be defended like the few innocents were.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:02PM (#10207800)
    I thought there were more Windows machines than that.
  • by LostCluster ( 625375 ) * on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:02PM (#10207804)
    Worms are a two-sided problem. In order for them to happen, it takes a software writer (far too often that software writer being named "Microsoft"...) to create software that has a ready-to-exploit flaw in it, and then it just takes one evil-minded programmer to kick a worm through that hole and make a mess that makes all of us wearing white hats have to do some serious cleanup and deal with downtimes.

    While I'm glad the kid is going to get taken to justice, I'm still a little troubled by the fact that all Microsoft doing for their part of it is releasing a "you shoulda run Windows Update" patch and kicking in a quarter-million US dollar reward... both of which they're doing out of the kindness of Bill Gates' heart because there's no law requiring either of them.

    I know small time programmers need liability protection from the abuse of their software... but shouldn't a large company like Microsoft be liable for the cleanup costs associated with their own security bugs?
    • Probably going to nuke my karma, but screw it, it's 3 in the morning and I'm ill, so here goes... Hooray for /. managing to turn a story about a criminal (let's not forget this man is a criminal) into a way to bash Microsoft - sure, their software has exploitable bugs in it, but that doesn't make it alright to break them - My real-life windows are easily breakable with a brick 'exploit' and a robber could easily break in and steal my posessions, but that's not the fault of the glaziers. I wouldn't expect t
  • cool! (Score:4, Funny)

    by penguinoid ( 724646 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:04PM (#10207823) Homepage Journal
    That sound you hear is millions of script kiddies saying "Dude, Sven Jaschan is, like, uber 1337!!! I bet I can beat him, though."
  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:05PM (#10207835)
    Sven Jachsen's parents have recently purchased a new home and car after a mysterious wire transfer from Redmond, WA. Deustche Bank declined an interview about this.
  • Fixed Link (Score:4, Informative)

    by Xeo 024 ( 755161 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:07PM (#10207852)
    Fixed link [slashdot.org] to May story.
  • catch me if you can [imdb.com] was a movie with tom hanks and leonardo di caprio that embellished mightily on the real life tale of a check forger and the fbi agent who pursued him.

    what is true about the story though is that the check forger in question went on to become one of the fbi's most valuable anti-forgery experts and he eventually went on to make millions helping banks design anti-forgery checks. here is the man's website [abagnale.com].

    so whenever i see someone like this sasser/ netsky author get caught, or another virus
    • The difference is, it's hard to forge a check, but writing a virus is very easy. Almost (if not all) of the programmers at Microsoft could have done the exact same thing, and most Slashdot readers also have the skill to write a virus. There aren't any shortage of people who can write viruses, but there are for check forgers, so that's why out-of-prison check forgers get employed.
    • a brilliant criminal is just someone who's skills are being expressed in the right forum, but in the wrong direction...

      Sure, but where's this brilliant criminal of whom you're writing? It doesn't take brilliance to write something like Sasser.
    • by Sialagogue ( 246874 ) <sialagogue@NOSPam.gmail.com> on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:37PM (#10208076)

      They're too busy hiring all the other brilliant software engineers who managed to find time in their days to *both* learn how to become brilliant software engineers, *and* develop even a minimal ethical framework for how to apply their skills.

      Seems like an overwhelming task, but that's why they deserve a good job goddammit.

      Jeesh.

    • ...a brilliant criminal is just someone who's skills are being expressed in the right forum, but in the wrong direction...

      This is a potentially-dangerous oversimplification. From what I recall, Ted Kaczynski (the Unabomber) was no dimwit, but -- given the social and political views expressed in his "manifesto" -- would you want to employ him in some manner in hopes of improving postal security? There's potentially much more to a criminal's mind than lack of a socially-acceptable avenue for using his/he

    • seriously, a brilliant criminal is just someone who's skills are being expressed in the right forum, but in the wrong direction. all law enforcement has to do is flip the brilliant criminal into an asset as a condition of a smaller criminal sentence/ fine for them. eventually, they may find real respect and success in their field of expertise on the white hat side of things.

      Hey, Clarice, do you think you can get this Hannibal Lector guy on our team? I hear he really knows his stuff!

  • Hrmm... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Lextar ( 810141 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:11PM (#10207892)
    1. Write some evil worms
    2. Get a friend to "inform" Microsoft
    3. Pay $158,000 in damages.
    4. Receive $250,000 from Microsoft.
    5. Big party!?

    Yes, I know - he'll probably have some other problems right now...

    I'm glad damages here in Germany are a bit more realistic than in the US.
    • Re:Hrmm... (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      I'm in!
      You write the worm, I'll turn you in for the $250,000.

      Yes, I'll have a Big Party in your honor.
    • he'll probably have some other problems right now...

      Yeah, the problem is a 110kg weightlifter named 'Günter' who wants to be his boyfriend. But look on the bright side, when he has served his time, he will be offered a good job with some software firm in the States plus he will probably never again suffer from constipation.

      Seriously though ... I hope they do lock him up. Some day one of these virus writers is going to cause major loss of life with his imbecilic plea for attention
    • 1. Write some evil worms
      2. Get a friend to "inform" Microsoft
      3. Pay $158,000 in damages.
      4. Receive $250,000 from Microsoft.


      4.1 TV Appearances - receive big bucks
      4.2 Book deal - receive more big bucks
      4.3 Movie deal - receive even more bigger bucks.
      4.4 Play UberConsultant to some Internet Security company - receive even more bucks

      5. Big party!?

      Have a great story to tell the grandkids.. priceless!

      Hmm... makes me wonder how Mitnick's doing now-a-days...
  • by serutan ( 259622 )
    Hah. What I want are that guys balls.
    In a jar.
    On my desk.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I realize these are two separate countries, but it's pretty fucked priorities when someone can lay in wait, then brutally decapitate two people, and then be sentenced to a life of freely wandering the nation's golf courses after snuffing out two lives.

    The you get someone who rearranges some magnetic particles on a disk, and this person is thrown into jail like he was the anti-christ.

    Moral of the story? Kill someone? Good for you, here's a nine iron. Write some code? Meet your new husband, Bubba.
    • Moral of the story? Kill someone? Good for you, here's a nine iron. Write some code? Meet your new husband, Bubba.

      Yes. it sucks. And no, it doesn't happen all the time. Not even most of the time.

      If this kid were in the states, and had OJ's lawyers, and the incredibly screwed up prosecution that OJ did, he'd probably be playing golf too.

  • Time = Money (Score:4, Interesting)

    by KB1GHC ( 800065 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:27PM (#10208016)

    a little math

    5 years * 365 days in a year * 24 hours a day = 43800 hours in prison
    $158,000 / 43800 hours = $3.60 an hour

    or

    5 years * 365 days in a year * work 8 hours a day = 14600 hours of work
    $158,000 / 14600 hours = $10 an hour (if he works 8 hours a day)

  • Damages in Germany (Score:5, Informative)

    by Florian Weimer ( 88405 ) <fw@deneb.enyo.de> on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:29PM (#10208038) Homepage
    The damages are so low because you have to prove in court that you actually lost the amount of money which you claim as damages. Over here, we don't have punitive damages.
  • by Embedded2004 ( 789698 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:37PM (#10208080)
    When I was 13-16 I had the ability to create viruses with the capabilities as any major virus. And I am sure many slashdotters also had/have these ability.

    I actually thought about releasing some viruses, well trojans, would not of done anything on the massive scale as some of this virus, I was not that stupid. Hell, I could actually be in jail now and life screwed up over something like that.

    Exploiting windows machines has never be challenging has not been for the past decade. The fact that some kid could wreck their life over a couple lines of VB code is kind of sad. I think it was genius on microsoft's part to get people to want hunt and track down those evil virus kiddies.

    It would be easier to create a destructive virus then it would be to rob a couple bags of chips from a store for most kids that create viruses. One might get you a slap on the rist (I am not sure how much you get in trouple for stealing couple dollars worth of food), and the other could get landing in jail and millions of dollars worth of damages.

    I honestly do not think for most of these kids the punshiments should be that extreme especially since most of those kids probably only copied and pasted some code, or changed a few lines of code. The punishment should fit the crime, if you can cause millions of dollars worth of damages in under and hours worth of work, then something is not right. I do not see any other way of doing something that bad on a massive scale other then blowing up a building or running around with a gun.

    I just hope these kids still get a chance to have a life, and they are only held partially responsible. If someone built a bridge that could be destroyed by walking over and pulling out a nail, and the hole thing would come down. There would be two people to blame. The designer and the person that actually did it. Lets just hope its handled carefully in this case.
    • When I was 13-16 I had the ability to create viruses with the capabilities as any major virus. And I am sure many slashdotters also had/have these ability.

      So, given that, you are obviously quite intelligent. Certainly more so than the average 6 year old who knows the difference between right and wrong. Given that you DIDN'T release a virus/worm such as you were able to create, I'd say that YOU did in fact "get" the difference between right and wrong at that point.

      I honestly do not think for most of t

  • by daliman ( 626662 )
    The kid should have turned himself in to microsoft and made a tidy profit out of it!
  • by stratjakt ( 596332 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @08:59PM (#10208226) Journal
    Sven was a young boy
    He had a heart of stone
    Lived 9 to 5 and worked his
    Fingers to the bone

    Just barely out of school
    Came from the edge of town
    Scripted like a switchblade
    So no one could take him down

    He had no money, ooh
    No good at home
    He walked the streets a soldier
    And he hacked the world alone
    And now it's...

    Chorus:
    Eighteen and life you got it
    Eighteen and life you know
    Your crime is time and it's
    Eighteen and life to go
    Eighteen and life you got it
    Eighteen and life you know
    Your crime is time and it's
    Eighteen and life to go

    Cheetos in his fat face
    His ass burned with vaseline
    It kept his motor runnin'
    But he never kept it clean

    They say he loved VB Script
    Sven 's the wild on
    He married trouble
    Had cyber with a bum

    Click, click! hack 'em up
    the party never ends
    You can't think of dying
    When the butthole's your best friend
    And now it's...

    Chorus

    "Accidents will happen"
    They all heard Sven say
    He fired his sasser to the wind
    That child blew a child (hes gay!)

    (solo)

    Chorus

    YEAH, I THINK GEEK THEMED SONG PARODIES ARE LAME TOO! MOD ME DOWN
  • by mixmasterjake ( 745969 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @09:31PM (#10208508)
    Don't know why but I am always curious to see a picture of people in the news. There don't seem to be too many of this guy. Probably because he was not 18 and the regulations of the media or whatever. Anyway, I managed to find this one. enjoy...

    http://www.sabah.com.tr/2004/08/05/dun112.html [sabah.com.tr]

  • He was arrested on May 7 after confessing to German crime officials that he originally wanted to create a virus, Netsky, to remove two other viruses, MyDoom and Bagle, from infected computers. After developing several versions of Netsky, he created Sasser, according to the officials. It seems like his intentions were good. The virus didn't really do anything direct malicious, as far as I remember. It just spread so fast that it took up all the network bandwidth. I can see how people might want to be compen
  • by svvampy ( 576225 ) on Thursday September 09, 2004 @09:46PM (#10208640)
    Seems there may be a discrepacy between the damages you can plausibly put before a court and those you can tell the media.
  • with 75 hours of work a week on Norton Anti-Virus programs.
  • by Mr. Sketch ( 111112 ) <`mister.sketch' `at' `gmail.com'> on Friday September 10, 2004 @12:52AM (#10209831)
    This is semi-related, but my company seems to have been infected with a new virus that I haven't heard about. It spreads through port 445 to random IP addresses like Sasser, but when it's infected, it kills the task manager and the registry editor whenever they're started. It also has a random file name in c:\windows\system32 and removes all the default network shares (C$, D$, ADMIN$, etc). It seems to put keys all over the registry, I had to just search the registry for the filename and delete all keys it found. I copied the executables to a non-infected machine with the absolute latest Symantec virus definitions and it didn't detect anything, so I quarentened the file and sent it to Symantec.

    Has anyone else seen this? I figured out how to remove it by killing the process, deleting all the registry keys with the filename and deleting the file. The Sasser and Korgo removal tools didn't detect anything so it doesn't seem to be one of those. I found some information on google about a similar virus, but it always used the filename msclock.exe and this one is a random filename.

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