http://english.people.com.cn/90001/6433017.html People's Daily Online June 19, 2008 Four employees of a Shanghai-based Internet security company appeared before a Beijing court on Tuesday accused of attacking the website of an online games operator. At the hearing at Haidian district court, Luo Chun, general manager of the Shanghai Share Security Network Technology Co Ltd, and three of his employees, were said to have launched attacks on several online games operators in Beijing. They flooded targeted websites with various requests thereby crashing their systems. They then asked the websites to buy their firewall products. Li Yichao, the 19-year-old deputy general manager and a computer expert, was accused of being the main person responsible for the attacks. He was under the instructions of Luo. Although he is a teenager with a junior high school education, Li is a "real genius" on web hacking, the Beijing Morning Post quoted Luo as saying. On April 26 last year they launched a one-month attack on the servers of Ourgame, a major online games operator in Beijing. Li then contacted Ourgame to sell firewall products. The company received a testing fee of more than 30,000 yuan ($4,360). However, Ourgame refused to buy or rent any of the Shanghai company's products, opting instead to spend more than 1 million yuan to hire foreign experts to solve their problems. Ourgame informed the police that its servers were being attacked. Police investigations discovered the servers were being attacked from Shanghai and that Shanghai Share Security Network was responsible. All the accused admitted the offense, and sentence will be passed within a month. "I was attracted by the quick money and got carried away. I applied my talents in the wrong way," Li told Beijing Morning Post. In the future, he will apply his skills only to legal things, he said. Insiders said that in the past year the number of computer hackers had been on the rise. The Ministry of Public Security said that from 2002 to last year, 12,521 cases of computer hacking has been detected. One involved the "panda burning incense case" which infected a number of computers last year. The accused, Li Jun, was sentenced to four years in prison last September. Hu Junfeng, general manager of the Kele8.com, an online games website, said the site was attacked on numerous occasions. "To avoid being attacked, we spent almost 500,000 yuan installing protective devices," he told China Daily. _______________________________________________ Attend Black Hat USA, August 2-7 in Las Vegas, the world's premier technical event for ICT security experts. Featuring 40 hands-on training courses and 80 Briefings presentations with lots of new content and new tools. Network with 4,000 delegates from 50 nations. Visit product displays by 30 top sponsors in a relaxed setting. http://www.blackhat.com
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