Ex-botnet master hired by TelstraClear

Summary: Remember Owen Thor Walker (AKILL) that got busted in the FBI's "Bot Roast" investigation for operating a 1.3 million hosts botnet in 2007, and even once considered to be offered a job as a cybercrime fighter by detectives impressed by his (mediocre) botnet management skills?

Remember Owen Thor Walker (AKILL) that got busted in the FBI's "Bot Roast" investigation for operating a 1.3 million hosts botnet in 2007, and even once considered to be offered a job as a cybercrime fighter by detectives impressed by his (mediocre) botnet management skills?

Well, it appears that he finally got a job at New Zealand's TelstraClear communications company, where he's been contracted for seminars and advertising activities related to security, and has already managed to "help companies understand that it isn't an overseas thing; attacks can happen anywhere."

They sure can, especially when you used to control 1 million infected computers across the world.

AKILL isn't an exception to the apparent rush to hire cybercriminals, often dubbed hackers by the mainstream media.  Earlier this month, Italian software companies were showing increased interest in hiring a convicted Romanian phisher that was impersonating the Italian Post Office and stealing money in the process. A much more grotesque picture emerges following Mafiaboy's newly released book entitled "How I Cracked the Internet and Why It's Still Broken" and Dmitry Golubov's leading position at the Internet Party of the Ukraine despite operating one of the major Internet forums for stolen financial data, several years ago.

Such eye-popping cases are a sad example of how while certain agencies bust, other international law enforcement couterparts discharge, and as it appears let the private/political sector diversify its HR "assets".  Even worse, they send a wrong signal to the rest of the cybercrime ecosystem.

Image courtesy of IAIN McGREGOR/Waikato Times.

Topics: Government US, Security

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6 comments
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  • Hiring bad guys...

    This makes as much sense as a police force hiring rapists and murderers because they may know where to look for bad guys and know how they think, then let child pornographers run day cares because they like kids.
    cuba_pete@...
  • Are you being serious?

    What better way to learn of someone's knowledge or skills than to pick someone who made headlines across the world for something they did.

    I doubt that it is necessarily *HIS* fault because the geniuses that allowed their PC's to be infected failed to patch and firewall properly.

    I say KUDOS! to Mr. AKILL. I hope that not only he but the many other people who demonstrate why security, patching, and vulnerabilities need to be handled as immediately as possible, are able to seek as happy of a life and useful or an occupation for the excellent skills that they possess. :)

    I mean come on... You all act like you have never done anything wrong. I suppose that he was a repeat offender that it may be questionable but even so, just because you break the law and get caught does not mean that you should be banned or forbidden from obtaining gainful employment or continue to take advantage of the skill that you solely possess and the rest of the world fails to reach and understand.
    DroppinIT
    • guh???

      "I doubt that it is necessarily *HIS* fault because the geniuses that allowed their PC's to be infected failed to patch and firewall properly."

      You're kidding right? Yeah the OS/software developers have to take responsibility for the security of their systems, but really what you're saying here is identical to this:

      "I doubt that it is necessarily *HIS* fault because the geniuses that allowed their homes to be invaded failed to latch and deadbolt properly."

      The onus is NOT on the victim to be constantly vigilant, and should not be. Tell my 82 year old grandfather that he should be setting custom white-list firewall rules on his home PC, or try to explain certificate authorities to him. He doesn't need to know it.

      AKILL is a criminal. Yes, I believe he should not have his life ruined for what he did, but that's VERY different from thinking it's laudable for him to be hired and paid more than 80% of (law-abiding) people in I.T will ever earn [b]BECAUSE[/b] he's a criminal.

      T
      DasTwitcH
  • Discharged without conviction

    Where admins here may gloat about what had taken place for Mr. AKILL, it seems that even the judge that was present for his case even had a good sense about his head:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AKILL

    "the presiding judge concluded that a conviction would only harm his future"
    DroppinIT
  • RE: Ex-botnet master hired by TelstraClear

    That's corporate America's way of telling everybody that they intend to add phishing and keylog credit theft to the HR and CEO's meth, Mexican brown heroin, and Golden Triangle heroin importation as a subrosa stock support and moneymaker.

    Keep us informed so we can decline business and e-mails from these corporations. A hearty thank-you for this heads up.
    littlepitcher
  • RE: Ex-botnet master hired by TelstraClear

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