-Caveat Lector-

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/25364.html
Police swoop on 30+ in UK pedo raids
By Tim Richardson
Posted: 20/05/2002 at 14:05 GMT


More than 30 people in the UK have been arrested on suspicion of
accessing US-based paedophile Web sites.

Officers from 30 forces took part in the raids, which were coordinated
by the National Criminal Intelligence Service (NCIS).

They were tipped off by US authorities, which passed on details of
people suspected of subscribing to paedophile Web sites between May 1999
and summer of 2001.

Some of those sites contained images of children as young as five,
according to the BBC.

No one from NCIS was available for comment at the time of writing.

Last month British police carried out a series of dawn raids in what was
regarded at the time as the UK's biggest crackdown on Internet
paedophiles.

Twenty-seven people, including teachers and those from the medical
profession, were held following raids by officers from 34 forces.

Several people were arrested - the youngest just 15 years old. ®


http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/25365.html
Altnet wakes up as worm spreads through KaZaA
By John Leyden
Posted: 20/05/2002 at 16:24 GMT


A worm is spreading through the KaZaA file sharing network: we hope it's
unrelated to today's activation of the controversial Altnet piggy-back P2P
network.

The worm, dubbed Benjamin, creates a directory accessible to other users
of the KaZaA network and regularly copies itself into this directory under
a multitude of different names.

When a network user conducts a search for a file under a name
corresponding with one the worm's pseudonyms the unsuspecting user is
given the chance to download it from the infected computer, facilitating
its spread through the KaZaA network.

In addition to eating up free disk space, Benjamin opens an anonymous Web
site from which it displays advertising banners - possibly in an attempt
by its creator to scam profits from increases in advertising displays. AV
firms have released updates to detect the worm and protection is now
largely in place.

News of the worm Benjamin comes as Brilliant Digital Entertainment today
announced the first use of its controversial Altnet P2P network, which
sits on top of KaZaA.

The move means search results by users on the KaZaA network will return
links to "listings of secure, copyrighted content from Altnet's content
partners" as well free MP3 and movie files. Paid listings from the
TopSearch sponsored link engine will display faster than non-paid listings
and will be placed at the top of the returned search results.

In addition, Altnet has a deal with Trymedia to provide videogames
protected by Digital Rights Management Technology. Brilliant/KaZaA is
testing the commercial waters with the introduction of sponsored links,
and plans to extend use of Altnet to perform computing tasks using the
spare processing power, storage and bandwidth on consenting users' PCs who
'opt-in'.

Altnet created a privacy backlash last month after it emerged that KaZaA
downloads contained 'sleeper' software which let Brilliant Digital
Entertainment, a 3D advertising and modelling software start-up, build
Altnet.

Brilliant/KaZaA promised to be more upfront about its activities following
its public mauling, but there's still a question mark about the security
of Altnet, which has attracted vehement criticism from some segments of
the security community, most notably Nicholas Weaver of Berkeley
University.

We don't think the (modest) spread of Benjamin is anything to do with the
firing up of Altnet but we're not sure and we couldn't get any clear
answer from the security researchers we asked.

Perhaps it's just a coincidence; after all this is not the first time that
a worm has exploited public access P2P file exchange networks. In January
this year, popular file-sharing software from Grokster and the Limewire
Gnutella Client was found to harbour the DlDer Trojan, a spyware
application which poses as a lottery game.

So we incline towards the cock-up - rather than conspiracy - theory. Do
you know better? ®

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