A Teenage Hacker Ring Stole $100 Million in Army and Xbox Tech

A Teenage Hacker Ring Stole $100 Million in Army and Xbox Tech


The U.S. Department of Justice just charged a group of four young hackers with a doozie of a crime. They're accused of breaking into both Microsoft and U.S. Army servers and stealing $100 million worth of everything from unreleased games to military training software. Two of the hackers have already pleaded guilty.


This is interesting news for a couple of reasons. For one, it's pretty incredible that four young men—the youngest is just 18—managed to steal so much intellectual property. But these guys were ambitious. Not only did they steal unreleased software and source code, they also snatched up trade secrets and financial information. The hacker ring, called "Xbox Underground," even manufactured and sold a counterfeit Xbox One before the console was released. "These were extremely sophisticated hackers," assistant U.S. attorney Ed McAndrew said on Tuesday. "Don't be fooled by their ages."


Case in point: the hackers breaching military servers. Apparently, they got ahold of flight simulation software intended that the Army planned to use to train Apache helicopter pilots, after they broke into a Seattle-based video game studio. Now, we've known for a long time how the country's cybersecurity is in jeopardy, but usually, we direct our anxiety towards the Chinese military, not teenagers. (Three out of the four hackers were teens when authorities were tipped off in 2011.) But if there's anything we've learned recently, it's that there's a lot of hacking happening within U.S. borders.


This is only the beginning of the crackdown. The two hackers who've already pleaded guilty to counts of computer fraud and copyright infringement face up to five years in prison. The other two face will likely have it worse if they don't cooperate—and we know that the government offers leniency to those who cooperate. Since authorities think there are at least six other individuals involved—the situation's primed for someone to snitch. [Guardian]


Image via Microsoft






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