Comments on: Expert: Online extortion growing more common
"Every online gambling site is paying extortion," says Alan Paller of the SANS Institute.
"Every online gambling site is paying extortion," says Alan Paller of the SANS Institute.
December 4, 2009 6:13 PM PST
December 4, 2009 4:56 PM PST
December 4, 2009 4:25 PM PST
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I invite you to lean more about what you can do to comabt this threat at:
http://www.webscreen-technology.com
Extortion is wrong and my business operates within the highly targeted market of online gaming so i am completely opposed to what goes on, however the Internet is just like Russia, Iraq and Afghanistan; create a free world where people can do what they like and a minority will abuse the opportunity for finanical gain. Kidnapping is easy money in the aforementioned countries just like a denial of service attack on the Internet (but to date without the deadly consequences).
The trick is going to be policing the Internet without turning it into a dictatorship.
The DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attacks utilize hundreds or thousands of individual computers that are all compromised without the owners knowledge. It would be possible to block all connections going to your bank preventing your credit cards, bank cards and check purchases from clearing or accessing your account in any way.
I am not worried about the gambling sites being extorted. I could care less what happens to sites that prey on their customers as is the motivation of all gambling institutions. My concern is that more legitimate enterprises will be caught by this same problem and they are not currently easy enough to catch.
demanding money from non-XP users in order for these
Windows users to get current and future security updates.
is all the dolts who run Microsoft products from home, just
waiting for someone to take their machines (Windows = lowest
cost of ownership!).
BTW, thugs are always bad, but just guess who's the biggest
player in the world extortion market? If you said the U.S.
government, give yourself a pat on the back.
Also, why in God's name would someone pay extortion to some
thug? If it happened to me, I'd call the cops right away. Yes, I
know the cops wouldn't do much unless I were a BIG player, but
it kind of re-affirms my belief that in the U.S. we're not all equal
under the law.
What we need are free markets, where the rights (life, liberty,
property) of each individual is equally protected by law. Wait,
wasn't that what the U.S. constitution was supposed to
guarantee? I don't care who's being targeted (drug dealer, or
monk), each of us has the right to be protected from the mob.
An attack against one is an attack against us all.
The more extortioners, the less money is available for each individual extortioner, and the less profitable the effort becomes. Eventually, it simply wont be worth anyone's time to extort this way.
The *REAL* problem is bad security measures on personal computers. The source of this problem, quite likely, is that we don't really have a choice in terms of personal operating systems. People are pretty much forced to use Microsoft Windows.
Perhaps SP2 for XP will solve this problem, perhaps not. If it doesn't, consumers need to educate themselves and make wise choices. If that doesn't happen, no amount of regulation or law enforcement will be effective, either re: hackers, or re: software monopolies.
- Online extortion
- by el33tpenguin July 5, 2007 7:21 PM PDT
- Tale of another extortionist: http://www.thekaramazovgroup.com
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(9 Comments)