Re: botnets world and the FBI

2004-06-01 Thread Henry Linneweh

E-crime = E-crap another media driven dribbled label.

There are many students, even housewives who in their
spare time write botnets and other software mechanisms
simply for the purpose of learning how to program, in
C and C++ or even learn how to script in Perl, Python
and tcl. To make a blanket statement is to condemn
innocent people who have nothing to do with a limited
group of people that do warez aka pirate software on
irc servers when law enforcement, already has been
there to make cases and arrests and prosecutions.

Seeing that a dalnet luser is crying wolf, if my
history has taught me correctly, that network got
ddos'd out of existence over warez and battles over
control over software piracy. Other networks were 
intelligent enough to get out of the way and make
sure such events do not destroy the client base.

-Nite


--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Tue, 01 Jun 2004 17:06:20 EDT, "Jamie C.Pole"
> said:
> > Because academics know EVERYTHING.
> 
> What's that got to do with anything?  (or are you
> making the rather rash and
> all-too-common generalization that everybody who
> posts from a .edu is an
> academic?  Surprise - at least some sites are clued
> enough to keep academics in
> the classroom and lab, and hire people who know
> something about production
> environments to run the network and the big
> servers)
> 
> > Let's not talk about the links between financial
> fraud, drugs, and 
> > terrorism.  Of course they're related...
> 
> Right... my point is that "e-crime" is a *symptom*
> of the others - you won't
> be able to do anything about e-crime until the
> *root* problem (fraud/drugs/terrorism)
> is dealt with.
> 
> We have had enough ill-defined 'War on
> Election-Year-Buzzwords' (terrorism,
> drugs, organized crime, illiteracy, poverty - the
> wars on Communism and
> Inflation seem to have evaporated.  I've probably
> missed a few...).  And we
> seem to do a very poor job of ever asking *why*
> people decide to blow us up, or
> do drugs, or be poor/homeless.  I don't see any
> reason why we'd do any better
> with e-crime.
> 
> And even if E-crime *is* a separate war we need to
> declare, where will we get
> the resources from?  Our military has long had a
> policy regarding the troop
> strength we need, and bases it on a "We can handle 3
> small conflicts, or 1
> large and one small, and we need to avoid being in 2
> major conflicts at once"
> type of ruleset.  Take a look how many billions of
> dollars a month we're
> collectively hemorrhaging in Iraq, and ask what
> we'll trim to fight e-crime.
> 
> 
> 

> ATTACHMENT part 2 application/pgp-signature 




Re: botnets world and the FBI

2004-06-01 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Tue, 01 Jun 2004 17:06:20 EDT, "Jamie C.Pole" said:
> Because academics know EVERYTHING.

What's that got to do with anything?  (or are you making the rather rash and
all-too-common generalization that everybody who posts from a .edu is an
academic?  Surprise - at least some sites are clued enough to keep academics in
the classroom and lab, and hire people who know something about production
environments to run the network and the big servers)

> Let's not talk about the links between financial fraud, drugs, and 
> terrorism.  Of course they're related...

Right... my point is that "e-crime" is a *symptom* of the others - you won't
be able to do anything about e-crime until the *root* problem (fraud/drugs/terrorism)
is dealt with.

We have had enough ill-defined 'War on Election-Year-Buzzwords' (terrorism,
drugs, organized crime, illiteracy, poverty - the wars on Communism and
Inflation seem to have evaporated.  I've probably missed a few...).  And we
seem to do a very poor job of ever asking *why* people decide to blow us up, or
do drugs, or be poor/homeless.  I don't see any reason why we'd do any better
with e-crime.

And even if E-crime *is* a separate war we need to declare, where will we get
the resources from?  Our military has long had a policy regarding the troop
strength we need, and bases it on a "We can handle 3 small conflicts, or 1
large and one small, and we need to avoid being in 2 major conflicts at once"
type of ruleset.  Take a look how many billions of dollars a month we're
collectively hemorrhaging in Iraq, and ask what we'll trim to fight e-crime.




pgptlguNjqqCc.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Re: botnets world and the FBI

2004-06-01 Thread Wayne E. Bouchard

With the rise of extortion incidents online, there's no doubt in my
mind that we've got lots of things that relate here. You rarely ever
find one crime being done independantly of another. I mean how do you
suppose that the terrorists get their funding? Large sums of money
pass to them every year as a result of credit card fraud, identity
theft, drugs, and other similar crimes. (Now thats by no means to say
that all such stuff is associated with terrorism -- there is afterall
old fashioned organized crime -- but it's hard to deny that there is
indeed a link.)

On Tue, Jun 01, 2004 at 01:53:17PM -0700, Bora Akyol wrote:
> 
> On 6/1/04 7:24 AM, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> 
> > To be brutal - do we really need to declare a "War on E-Crime" when we're
> > still
> > fighting a War on Terrorism and a War on Drugs?
> 
> How do you know they are not related.
> 
> Bora

---
Wayne Bouchard
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Network Dude
http://www.typo.org/~web/


Re: botnets world and the FBI

2004-06-01 Thread Jamie C . Pole

On Jun 1, 2004, at 4:53 PM, Bora Akyol wrote:
On 6/1/04 7:24 AM, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
To be brutal - do we really need to declare a "War on E-Crime" when 
we're
still
fighting a War on Terrorism and a War on Drugs?
How do you know they are not related.
Bora

Because academics know EVERYTHING.
Let's not talk about the links between financial fraud, drugs, and 
terrorism.  Of course they're related...

The majority of my forensics cases involve one or more of the above 
"unrelated" wars.  The FBI is mostly clueless when it comes to these 
different types of fraud, but the Secret Service most assuredly is not.

Anyone who feels compelled to complain about privacy should feel free 
to move to Australia - you can't take $10.00 (AUS) out of an ATM 
without the government knowing it.  In the USA, we have ABSOLUTELY 
NOTHING to complain about.

WOW!  How quickly these threads go off-topic...  :-)
Jamie
--
Jamie C. Pole  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Principal Consultant
J.C. Pole & Associates, Inc.
Information Security / Information Warfare / Information Forensics
Comprehensive Law Enforcement & Litigation Support
--


Re: botnets world and the FBI

2004-06-01 Thread Bora Akyol

On 6/1/04 7:24 AM, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

> To be brutal - do we really need to declare a "War on E-Crime" when we're
> still
> fighting a War on Terrorism and a War on Drugs?

How do you know they are not related.

Bora



Re: botnets world and the FBI

2004-06-01 Thread Valdis . Kletnieks
On Tue, 01 Jun 2004 00:01:48 PDT, John Obi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  said:

(Insert standard "Death of Internet predicted, film at 11" sound bite here)

> I found this important article, maybe it's the time to
> have the FBI to work in the e-crime more and more.

Then again, maybe it's not.

Where will the FBI get the budget to work on e-crime?  Remember that to be good
at that takes some talent and training, and the prospective candidates can
probably get better paying jobs elsewhere, even in today's economy.

To be brutal - do we really need to declare a "War on E-Crime" when we're still
fighting a War on Terrorism and a War on Drugs?

(I'll leave it to the others in the tinfoil helmet brigade to discuss whether we should
give the FBI sufficient budget in order to be able to effectively use the various
"War on Privacy and Civil Rights" tools they've been given recently)


pgpWZwWWnhxIX.pgp
Description: PGP signature


botnets world and the FBI

2004-06-01 Thread John Obi

Hello,

I found this important article, maybe it's the time to
have the FBI to work in the e-crime more and more.

http://www.starbanner.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20040506/ZNYT05/405060313/1009/BUSINESS

Thanks,

-J




__
Do you Yahoo!?
Friends.  Fun.  Try the all-new Yahoo! Messenger.
http://messenger.yahoo.com/