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Zero Day

Ryan Naraine, Emil Protalinski and Dancho Danchev

Was Koobface exposé the right move?

By | January 20, 2012, 5:50am PST

Summary: Stefan Tanase argues that the public outing of the Koobface hacker gang makes it even more difficult for law enforcement to act.

Guest editorial by Stefan Tanase

Just as a stand-up comedian carefully places his punch line at the end of the joke, I also usually leave my conclusions for the end of a post. Except for this time. This time, I would like to start with the conclusion: For an ongoing investigation not to be jeopardized, it is extremely important that all information related to those being investigated does not become public.

When (cyber)criminals suspect they’re being investigated, they become more careful. But when they are sure that someone is after them, they become unpredictable in their actions. Simply hiding, making a run, covering their tracks, buying their freedom, fighting back or any combination of these are just some of the options. I’m sure you know this if you watch the Discovery Channel. You also know this if you’re actively tracking the latest disclosures around the Koobface botnet.

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What happened with Koobface after the identities of its authors and the inner workings of their underground business became public? The obvious happened, of course. They began wiping out all public information about themselves from the Internet: Facebook profiles, Twitter feeds, Foursquare check-ins, Flickr pictures, you name it. They are covering their tracks in the cyber-world as we speak, and only God knows what else they are doing in the real world to protect the most valuable thing they have right now: their freedom.

[ SEE: Facebook exposes hackers behind Koobface worm ]

A disclosure of information that can jeopardize an ongoing investigation is not something which I support, nor something with which I agree.

I’ve heard OSINT (Open-source intelligence) as an argument for this public disclosure. It’s not. OSINT is about using freely available information to produce actionable intelligence, not about making actionable intelligence freely available on the Internet. Was it done to push authorities by creating pressure or to aid them, in any way? I’m not sure the pressure supposed to push law enforcement into actually doing something in this case will be enough to compensate for the fact that the gang behind Koobface are now destroying evidence and going further underground. The public exposure has obviously hurt efforts.

Investigations can take years – many years. Anyone who has actually been involved in such an investigation knows how frustrating it can be. But it doesn’t mean that we should at one point make everything public and hope for the best. Bad guys go to jail after being on trial, not after being on trial by the media.

Koobface gang pulls server after Facebook exposes hackers ]

Therefore I am making a public plea to all security researchers that were, are or will be involved in cybercrime investigations: Don’t publish data that can ruin years of investigative work. Only share information regarding attribution with law enforcement and trusted contacts. Make sure you understand that certain legal procedures need to be followed and they might take time. Be patient and don’t become frustrated. In the end, everything will be ok. If it’s not ok, then it’s not the end.

I would love to be able to end this text in an optimistic note. However, in real life things are not black and white all the time. There are countless other e-crime related activities in which it’s not clear if law enforcement, either alone or with private partners, are working on a case. That often makes it difficult to ’stand by’ while it seems that nothing is being done. It’s a fine line. What is needed is a better way to determine whether something is being worked across various levels of law enforcement, and what level of participation is occurring with private partners.

* My thanks to Kurt Baumgartner, Jan Droemer, Andre’ M. DiMino, Costin Raiu, Roel Schouwenberg, Dmitry Tarakanov and countless others for contributing to this article.

** Stefan Tanase is a senior security researcher at Kaspersky Lab.  See important disclosure.

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Topics

Ryan Naraine is a journalist and social media enthusiast specializing in Internet and computer security issues.

Disclosure

Ryan Naraine

The most important disclosure is of my employment with Kaspersky Lab as a member of the global research and analysis team. Kaspersky Lab is a global company specializing in anti-malware and secure content management technologies. I do not own stocks or other investments in any technology company.

Biography

Ryan Naraine

Ryan Naraine is a journalist and social media enthusiast specializing in Internet and computer security issues. He is currently security evangelist at Kaspersky Lab, an anti-malware company with operations around the globe. He is taking a leadership role in developing the company's online community initiative around secure content management technologies.

Prior to joining Kaspersky Lab, Ryan was Editor-at-Large/Security at eWEEK, leading the magazine's and Web site's coverage of Internet and computer security issues and managing the popular SecurityWatch blog, covering the daily threats, vulnerabilities and IT security technologies. He also covered IT security, hacker attacks and secure content management topics for Jupiter Media's internetnetnews.com.

Ryan can be reached at naraine SHIFT 2 gmail.com. For daily updates on Ryan's activities, follow him on Twitter.

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Amen, Brother
m0o0o0o0o Updated - 21st Jan
And another thing - the whole "Ha, ha, these are all the stupid things that you did that let us catch up to you" is utterly retarded. There is nothing like educating the bad guys how to avoid getting caught. Attribution for your counter-hacking prowess is NOT more important than stopping the bad guys - ALL THE BAD GUYS - not just this team.

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