By
Joris Evers
Thursday, September 15 2005 09:51 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/security/0,39044215,39254731,00.htm
A Massachusetts teen who admitted to accessing T-Mobile USA's internal
systems and posting data from Paris Hilton's cell phone on the Web will serve 11
months in a juvenile facility.
The teenager pleaded guilty last week to a series of hacking incidents, the
theft of personal information and making bomb threats to high schools in Florida
and Massachusetts, according to a statement from the U.S. attorney for the
district of Massachusetts.
All crimes took place over a 15-month period, beginning in March 2004. Victims suffered a total of about US$1 million in damages, according to the statement.
One of the crimes involves gaining unauthorized access to internal T-Mobile
USA systems in January this year, a representative of the wireless carrier, a
subsidiary of T-Mobile, said Wednesday.
The perpetrator's name is not being disclosed because he is a juvenile.
The young man was sentenced to 11 months of detention in a juvenile facility,
to be followed by two years of supervised release. During the entire period, he
is barred from owning or using a PC, cell phone or any other device that can
access the Internet, according to the statement.
Investigations into possible accomplices of the teenager are ongoing, the
statement said.
Having gained access to T-Mobile USA's systems, the teen found information
Paris Hilton stored on her Sidekick,
a mobile device that lets users make calls, surf the Web, take pictures, and
send e-mail and instant messages.
The unnamed teen subsequently published
the information, which included racy pictures and phone numbers of Hilton's
celebrity contacts, on the Web. The numbers included those of rapper Eminem,
actor Vin Diesel, singers Christina Aguilera and Ashlee Simpson, and tennis
players Andy Roddick and Anna Kournikova.
Hilton could not be reached for comment on the case because she was traveling
in a country where her cell phone does not work, her publicist Robert Zimmerman
said Wednesday.
Besides nabbing the personal information of socialite-turned-reality show
celebrity Hilton, the teenager used the T-Mobile access to create telephone
accounts for himself and friends without paying for them, the T-Mobile
representative said.
"We're pleased that he has been brought to justice," T-Mobile spokesman Peter
Dobrow said. "We dedicated significant resources to help bring this criminal to
justice." The carrier has made changes to ensure that such breaches don't happen
again, he said.
In addition to the T-Mobile incident and making bomb threats at high schools,
the teen admitted to hacking into the network of a major Internet service
provider, a data broker and a second major telephone provider, according to the
U.S. attorney statement.
In the case of the ISP, the teen was able in August 2004 to access computers
on the company's internal network and obtain proprietary information by
installing a rogue program on an employee's computer, according to the
statement. The ISP was America Online, a source familiar with the matter said
Wednesday.
In January, the minor gained access to the systems of a data broker, which he
used to look up information on individuals, according to the U.S. Attorney's
statement. The data broker is LexisNexis, WashingtonPost.com reported.
LexisNexis earlier this year said an intrusion into its databases may have compromised personal information of about 310,000 Americans.
In June, a second phone company became a victim to the juvenile's attack,
according to the U.S. Attorney's statement. A phone that had been activated
fraudulently was disabled, and the teen retaliated with a denial-of-service
attack on the company's Web site when it refused to reactivate the phone.
"Computer hacking is not fun and games. Hackers cause real harm to real
victims," U.S Attorney Michael Sullivan said in the statement. "Would-be
hackers...should be put on notice that such criminal activity will not be
tolerated."