Posts tagged as:

BBC

BBC Botnet-Taxpayers money well spent?

by certifiedbug on March 18, 2009

in Internet Security

I was astonished at a statement by Melih Abdulhayoglu posted at The Tech Herald and a video in which Comodo’s CEO commended the BBC for controlling 22,000 users computers during their experiment with a botnet.

It’s taxpayers money well spent.

Well done, BBC!

We applaud BBC

8-O Is anyone in their PR department awake at the helm.

Certifiedbug, March 17, 2009. Auntie Beeb visits with botnet

Computer Misuse Act 1990

eWeeK: The British Botnet Corporation

There are some things you just don’t do in security research or you become part of the problem. Controlling and modifying other people’s machines, even if they are “bots” in a botnet, is one of them. This is what the BBC did.

Alex Eckelberry: The BBC botnet debacle

Malware researchers routinely deal with botnets for analysis purposes. It would be considered a high crime indeed to allow a spambot to actually send spam to the outside world, even for “testing” purposes. And, shutting down a botnet yourself, even with the best intentions, is simply not a good idea. You don’t know what accidental harm you may cause. You don’t really know what’s on the user’s system that will simply restart the whole process.

Well said.

http://certifiedbug.com/blog/tag/botnet/

BBC License
http://www.bbc.co.uk/complaints/

Update
ESET Threat Blog: Comodo Backs BBC against AV

Abdulhayoglu is entitled to his opinion, of course. I wonder, though, whether mainstream companies who planned on attending a security forum organized by Comodo later this month will now be considering whether they can afford to be seen to align with such radical views on the need to conform with the rule of law and, arguably, its own guidelines on what is acceptable in terms of conducting business with criminals?

The Register: BBC botnet ‘public interest’ defence rubbished by top IT lawyer V for Vigilante

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Auntie Beeb visits with botnet

by certifiedbug on March 15, 2009

in Internet Security

Reporters have called into question the ethics of an investigation into global cyber crime by the British Broadcasting Company which obtained a botnet via chatrooms on the Internet, hacked into 22,000 infected machines using their technology program Click, and launched a previously arranged Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack on a backup site owned by security company Prevx.

The programme did not access any personal information on the infected PCs.
If this exercise had been done with criminal intent it would be breaking the law.
But our purpose was to demonstrate botnets’ collective power when in the hands of criminals.

Is your PC doing a hacker’s dirty work?

Before destroying their bots, BBC made users aware that their computers were part of a botnet by changing the desktop wallpaper to display a message from BBC Click. Guessing that produced a heart flutter.

BBC cybercrime probe backfires

Code Red, the BBC, and the Computer Misuse Act

Did BBC break the law by using a botnet to send spam?

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