Criminals working with computer hackers pose a rising threat to businesses and governments as those entities increase their dependence on IT systems, a top U.S. federal prosecutor said Thursday.
"There's always this worry, and I think a legitimate worry, that terrorists will actually launch computer attacks on critical
infrastructure," said Christopher Painter, principal deputy chief of the U.S. Department of Justice's Computer Crime and Intellectual
Property Section.
Painter, who prosecuted famed hacker Kevin Mitnick before he signed a plea agreement, cited a case where a hacker in Australia
fouled a fresh water supply in 2000 by hacking into a wireless connection and releasing tons of sewage.
In the U.S. in 1997, a juvenile hacked into a computer phone and data system and turned off the runway lights at an airport
in Worcester, Massachusetts, Painter said.
"That obviously could have had pretty dire consequences," Painter said, who spoke about cybercrime at the Information Security
Systems Association conference in London.
Authorities have seen an increase in cases where hackers steal corporate data and then attempt to blackmail companies, Painter
said. Others steal data and sell it to other criminals.
In October 2004, the U.S. Secret Service busted the "Shadowcrew," a criminal group that stole credit card data and then sold
it on a Web site, Painter said.
The problem for law enforcement is that the bad guys are showing increased technical sophistication and often commit cybercrimes
across borders, Painter said.
But countries are coordinating more on investigations and takedowns, Painter said. Forty-five countries have joined the G8
24/7 High Tech Crime Network, a group of contacts that can offer immediate assistance to other countries on terrorist or criminal
cases involving electronic evidence, Painter said.
Painter cited a success this week where Moroccan authorities sentenced two people to prison for the Zotob and Mytob worms, which downed computers worldwide in August 2005. The U.S., Turkey, Morocco and Microsoft
Corp. aided in that investigation, he said.
But a difficulty with international investigations are countries with weak or no laws against computer crime, Painter said.
"Any country that doesn't have good laws is going to be a weak link," he said.