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View Full Version : Author of Blaster Worm sentenced to no video games!



Flack
01-28-2005, 11:04 PM
(among other things ...)

Jeffrey Lee Parson was barely 18 years old and dealing with some personal problems when he launched a variant of the Blaster worm that infected more than 48,000 computers worldwide. On Friday, a federal judge in Seattle sentenced Parson to 18 months in prison, three years of supervised release and 100 hours of community service.

"What you've done is a terrible thing. Aside from injuring people and their computers, you shook the foundation of technology," U.S. District Judge Marsha Pechman told Parsons. She will determine restitution at a hearing Feb. 10.

Parson was indicted in September 2003 and charged with sending out a variant of the MS Blaster worm on August 12, 2003.

Parson admitted he created his worm by modifying the original MS Blaster worm and adding a mechanism that allowed him to have complete access to certain infected computers, according to a statement from the U.S. Attorney's Office in Seattle, Wash.

Parson's W32.Blaster-B variant first appeared just days after W32.Blaster-A first appeared. Blaster-B used a different file name, teekids.exe, as opposed to the original msblast.exe, IDG News Service reported.

The worm was programmed to take advantage of a vulnerability in the DCOM (Distributed Component Object Model) interface component of Windows, which handles messages sent using the RPC (remote procedure call) protocol, to spread itself over the Internet and launch denial-of-service attacks against popular Web sites, including Microsoft's Windows Update Web site, the news service said.

"This defendant's malicious attack on the information superhighway caused an economic and technological disruption that was felt around the world," said Assistant Attorney General Christopher A. Wray of the Criminal Division. "Today's sentence demonstrates to criminals intent on releasing computer viruses and worms that they will be found and appropriately punished."

The judge said she took into consideration Parson's special circumstances. Parson, who weighs more than 300 pounds, was three weeks past his 18th birthday when he released the worm, had history of mental illness, and was inadequately monitored by his parents on his computer activities, the judge said.

Pechman told Parson that his community service had to be through face-to-face contact with others and restricted his use of computers to only educational and business purposes. "No video games, no chat rooms," Pechman said to Parsons. "I don't want you to have anonymous friends, I want you to have real world friends."

http://weblog.infoworld.com/techwatch/archives/001035.html

I still say he should have been sentenced to visiting every infected computer and fixing them.

Has anyone else ever been sentenced to "no video games" before?

Cryomancer
01-29-2005, 12:12 AM
Wouldn't specifying no use of computers for recreation, as opposed to a blanket no use policy, be fairly...unusual? Perhaps cruel?

I mean, yeah, he's a bastard for it, but why not just say "don't touch technology for x years"? The hackers of the 80s who did less damage got worse than that.

Cleatis
01-29-2005, 02:45 AM
Wouldn't specifying no use of computers for recreation, as opposed to a blanket no use policy, be fairly...unusual? Perhaps cruel?

This day and age, sentencing him to ZERO computer contact would be like sentencing him to manual labor for the rest of his life. While some of us here prefer manual labor...computers play a much larger role in our lives than they did in the 80s. Im not saying its right or wrong. Im just saying that that may have been the judges reasoning. Computers arent going away, imagine what "no computer contact" will mean 10-20 years from now.

-hellvin-
01-29-2005, 02:55 AM
Aside from injuring people and their computers

People and their computers? He must be really smart to figure out how to harm someone with a virus. Either that or they meant the people's injuries from punching their computer in anger?

Cleatis
01-29-2005, 03:00 AM
Aside from injuring people and their computers

People and their computers? He must be really smart to figure out how to harm someone with a virus.

I take it you dont spend much time on the Computer Power User forums. LOL

-hellvin-
01-29-2005, 03:06 AM
Aside from injuring people and their computers

People and their computers? He must be really smart to figure out how to harm someone with a virus.

I take it you dont spend much time on the Computer Power User forums. LOL

LoL, nah, I'm just being my usual asshole commenting self ;D!

Flack
01-29-2005, 08:54 AM
Well I'm sure what they meant was affecting people, which it did. I read an article that talked about how many millions of dollars were spent just specifically cleaning up that virus. Maybe he didn't injure people, but he did injure businesses, both financially and their productivity.

Iron Draggon
01-29-2005, 09:18 AM
Well theoretically, visiting sites that teach him how to be a better hacker and avoid getting caught could be considered "educational", so I think a much better sentence would've been to forbid him from using a computer at all. He thought it was cute to launch denial of service, so deny his ass service!

pragmatic insanester
02-01-2005, 03:26 AM
i have a festing hate for people who create viruses and such. being that i am a thief, one could say i would have no right to complain. however, stealing material posessions from a person once is an immediate kind of loss. sending a virus out that conflicts the lives of people you never come into contact with is a meaningless and cowardly act. not to mention that the same person can obtain a virus more than once, while say, a snes game i took can only be marked up as a tragedy a single time. had i been the judge, i would have had the boy's eyes removed as a fitting sentence.

lurpak
02-01-2005, 03:49 AM
Tkids caused all sorts of problems on large institutions such as hospitals, $millions spent getting rid of that cretins destructive program and the DOS to information could well have cost lives and even if not a life, money that could have been spent on saving lives..

I personally will have lost at least 1 hour of my short life to the Tkids virus, one hour is a lot to somone who is dying and we are all dying