A 20-year-old Estonia man has pleaded guilty to stealing data on more than
1,300 U.S. military and government personnel and providing it to the Islamic
State. When Windows 10 gets wonky, there's a whole set of activities to try and
set things right. If Ardit
Ferizi’s goal was to “incite terrorist attacks,” the U.S. Department of Justice
stated Wednesday. Ferizi once led a hacking group called Kosova Hacker’s
Security, or KHS, which claims to have defaced over 20,000 websites. Last June
he hacked into a U.S. Internet hosting company to steal the personnel data,
which included addresses, telephone numbers and email logins. Ferizi used an
online account with the name “KHS”, which led the FBI to suspect his
involvement. He also neglected to cover his tracks. When the FBI examined the
hacked server, they found the IP address Ferizi had used to carry out his
attack. The same IP address had been used to access his Facebook and Twitter
accounts. He was arrested in Malaysia
last year and extradited to the U.S. for trial. He faces a maximum 25 years in
prison. The data he stole was passed to an ISIS member named Junaid Hussain,
also a hacker. Hussain was later killed in an airstrike in Syria. It's
not the only time Ferizi supplied information to ISIS. Last April, he
provided data on dozens of U.S., British and French citizens, by sending
screenshots of their credit card information. The DOJ called it the first case of its kind.Are their other data
thieves seeking to obtain similar data about other US government or military sources?
Offer your comments here at the Cloud and Cyber Security Center.
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