Photo: Warner Bros. Entertainment
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In "Firewall," Harrison Ford made security
engineers into heroes.
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Last spring, the teachers, students, and workers at
the University of Kentucky Federal Credit Union received
an email that seemed routine enough: Because of a
problem in the electronic banking system, customers
needed to verify their account information. After
clicking a link, they were taken to a page with the
bank’s logo where they were instructed to enter their
personal identification numbers.
Unbeknownst to the 20 victims, however, their
financial details were not going back to the campus,
they were zipping to South Korea, where they would be
used to create pirate debit cards. The only hint of a
scam was tucked away in the site’s Web address, which
read “http” instead of the usual “https,” designating a
secure site. The Wildcats had just been phished. And they’re
not alone. Phishing, social and technical engineering
aimed at hustling surfers’ personal data, is an
insidious form of identity theft that’s on the rise.
According to a report by IBM, phishing attacks hit an
all-time high, rising by 226 percent in 2005. The
Federal Trade Commission receives nearly 200 000 reports
of phishing attacks every year.
The phishers feed a larger epidemic of identity theft
that is reaching epic proportions. The FTC found that,
every year, almost 10 million people are victims of
identity theft, costing consumers US $5 billion and
businesses $48 billion. But there’s one place where the
rise in computer crimes is paying off: Hollywood. In the
21st century, computer crime–from hacked passwords to
identity theft–is the stuff of celluloid dreams.
This year in the movie "Firewall," Harrison Ford made
security engineers into heroes when he portrayed Jack
Stanfield, a banking brainiac whose firewall system
becomes a sticking point for a gang of ruthless baddies.
Ford gets told to transfer $100 million into a crook’s
account–or his family gets it. Of course, Harrison
manages to save the bank–and the day–but a larger
question looms: can computer crimes be sexy?
Hollywood has been playing this game for decades, but
the first–and still most influential – computer crime
movie came in 1983 with "War Games." Matthew Broderick
plays a teen geek (and future icon for generations of
hackers) who nearly starts World War III after launching
a thermonuclear war game between the U.S. and Russia.
Oops! Twelve years later, Sandra Bullock chased down her
own identity thieves in the shlocky thriller, "The Net."
Since then, terrible movies, from "Hackers" (teen geeks
battle evil computer virus!) to, yes, "The Net 2.0"
(tagline: "No. Money. No. Identity. No. Way Out.”) have
combed this brave new world.
But the reality of cybercrime is more intriguing than
these slapdash films could imagine. Consider the
real-life Bonnie and Clyde of spyware. Michael and Ruth
Haephrati seemed like any dot-com
wannabes. The young married couple,
living in London, operated an Internet security firm
called Target Eye. But when the two were taken into
custody last May, it turned out they were targeting more
than anyone suspected. The Haephratis are accused of
being the masterminds behind one of the biggest cases
ever of commercial espionage; they allegedly pawned
services to help some of Israel’s biggest companies
infiltrate each other’s inner workings. Their weapon of
choice: spyware.
For years, spyware–insidious software that secretly
installs itself on a computer and then logs and
disseminates a user’s activity–and its dirty cousin,
adware, which unleashes unwanted pop-ups, have been a
growing nuisance online. The National Cyber Security
Alliance has reported that 80 percent of home surfers
have had spyware or adware on their computers. Infection
is so widespread that there are now Web sites devoted to
chronicling spyware horror stories.
The case of the Haephratis reveals just how
sophisticated spyware has become. “This marks the
appearance of custom-coded spyware that’s targeted for a
specific purpose,” says Kurt Opsahl, staff attorney for
the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the San
Francisco-based civil liberties group, “unlike malicious
code [such as viruses and worms] it is designed to be
surreptitious.”
Ironically, the rise of interest in Hollywood
cyber-drama hasn’t created a boom in consumer awareness.
The government is stepping up its fight against
spyware. The U.S. House of Representatives passed two
anti-spyware bills, which could send spyware peddlers to
prison for up to five years or face $3 million in fines.
But the ultimate protection is to download and update
anti-spyware software such as Ad-Aware or Spybot Search
and Destroy. Experts suggest shelling out the extra cash
for programs that automatically monitor spyware
invasions.
Ironically, the rise of interest in Hollywood
cyber-drama hasn’t created a boom in consumer awareness.
It’s one thing to fall for a phishing scam, which can be
avoided easily enough by simply calling a financial
institution before submitting private financial
information online, but other forms of electronic
identity theft are not as easy to protect against.
Subscribers who typed in the Web address of the New York
City-based Internet service provider, Panix, were
stealthily redirected to a dummy site in Australia; once
there, the site attempted to lure visitors into
submitting compromising personal data. Known as
pharming, this
insidious spin-off of phishing can be exacted via
viruses, such as the notorious Banker Trojan, or hacker
exploits of firewall servers. “This could rapidly worsen
as attack systems become more automated,” says Peter
Cassidy, secretary general of the Anti-Phishing Work
Group, an association of business and law enforcement
organizations.
Sometimes, however, identity theft doesn’t rely on the
consumer’s role at all. Such was the case last year when
MasterCard International revealed that names, accounts,
and security codes of 40 million customers had been
compromised by a hacker attack; of these, 68 000
customers were deemed to be at particularly high risk.
What to do? Exercise good online hygiene by downloading
browser security patches and by running both firewalls
and anti-virus software. Make sure everything is up to
date. And don’t get lulled into thinking that cybercrime
only happens in the movies.