Information Security News mailing list archives

Microsoft hacker fired


From: "A.Mouse" <a.mouse () ARPA FSNET CO UK>
Date: Thu, 4 Jan 2001 14:54:09 -00

http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/6/15802.html
By: Kieren McCarthy
Posted: 04/01/2001 at 11:40 GMT

The hacker who made Microsoft look foolish in November by breaking
into its servers through a known security hole has been fired by
his company Getronics.

He was fired yesterday after a court case. Getronics terminated Dimitri
Van de Glessen's one-year contract but there is no Netherlands law
that allows a company to fire members of staff for hacking in their
private time, so both parties went to court to resolve the issue.


Dimitri told us that he was technically fired for his failure to
attend an event in Amsterdam. The event came soon after Dimitri had
entered the media spotlight. He told us: "I did not want to go to
Schipol [the event was held in a conference centre at Schipol airport]
because I had just become known by the press and did not want people
following me and arriving at my hotel."

His reluctance was understandable, but that hasn't stopped Getronics
- a Microsoft partner - firing him. The irony is that the computer
security company had hired Dimitri in the first place for his hacking
skills. In court, the company denied knowledge of Dimitri extra-curricular
hacking or his own company, although Dimitri strongly refutes this.


Dimitri also claims he was fired not because of his hacking but because
he went first to Microsoft, then the press, rather than to his company.
This meant the company was unable to use the hack to tender for
a security contract on the Beast of Redmond's servers: "They wanted
to tell Microsoft so they could say they had a hacker in there. But
I was not going to take money. That's not right."

Getronics spokesman Herbert Vanzel had a different take on matters:
"When we hired Dimitri we knew he was a hacker and we wanted his
professional view on IT systems. As a private person he hacked other
companies, which gave us problems with those companies. We spoke
to Dimitri so this wouldn't happen again."

Dimitri, Herbert said, would not give an assurance that he wouldn't
hack Getronics partners, so his one-year contract was terminated.
"We can't allow people like this to work for us," he said.

Dimitri was keen to explain his behaviour after he had hacked into
Microsoft: "I told Microsoft, but they wouldn't listen, so I told
the press and then everyone was suddenly interested."

The court decided that Dimitri was to get a three-month pay-off (reportedly
10,000 gilders (£2,850)). He has yet to decide what to do. "I've
been at home for six weeks and I'll stay here a bit longer. I don't
know if I want to stay in security - no one wants to listen."

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