The mastermind behind some of the world's biggest and longest-running botnets has been jailed and his vast criminal infrastructure taken down, in part because of a careless operational security blunder that allowed authorities to identify his anonymous online persona.
Officials from the Republic of Belarus reported Monday they detained a participant in the sprawling Andromeda botnet network, which was made up of 464 separate botnets that spread more than 80 distinct malware families since 2011. On Tuesday, researchers with security firm Recorded Future published a blog post that said the participant was a 33-year-old Belarusian named Sergey Jarets.
To most people, Jarets was known only as "Ar3s," the moniker assigned to a highly respected elder in the criminal underground. In online discussions, Ar3s demonstrated expertise in malware development and the reverse-engineering of software. He also acted as a reputable guarantor of deals that were hashed out online. As it turned out, the ICQ number of the figure he used as one of his primary contact methods was registered in several whitehat discussion forums to one Sergey Jaretz.
(Score: 2, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 08 2017, @04:27PM (1 child)
1) It's always Sergey
2) It's hard for people to not brag about doing shit like this. People want credit and adulation. Though in this case it turned out to be incompetence.
I once went through the audurous process of creating 6 virtual identities from scratch in order to register 6 separate MMO accounts using friend-referral program. I made up their birthdays, their likes, their dislikes, their family trees and made basic virtual footprint for all of them, starting with fresh email address. I wrote all the informational in a very detailed form in a physical notebook. In hind-sight I might have gone too far.
(Score: -1, Offtopic) by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 08 2017, @04:54PM
Nope. Wrong two things [youtube.com]: