Previous

Internet Bans Greet Illegal File Sharers at Bowling Green State U.

Next

Reconsidering Authority in Wikipedia World

October 23, 2008, 02:10 PM ET

U. of Pennsylvania Student Gets 3 Months in Jail in Botnet Case

A federal judge in Philadelphia sentenced a University of Pennsylvania student who directed large-scale botnet attacks to three months in jail and nine months of confinement in a halfway house and at home, according to a report on The New York Times’ Web site.

The student, Ryan Goldstein, will be on probation for five years. He also will be required to pay the government a $30,000 fine and to pay the university $6,100 in restitution because one of its servers crashed while Mr. Goldstein was using it to conduct an attack using a 50,000-machine botnet. A botnet is a network of computers that have been made into digital zombies controlled by a hacker or hackers.

After negotiating with prosecutors, Mr. Goldstein pleaded guilty in February to charges of aiding and abetting another computer hacker to break into a computer remotely. He could have been sentenced to up to six months in jail. —Lawrence Biemiller

Categories: Security, Legal-Troubles

  • Print
  • Comment

Add Your Comment

Commenting is closed.