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Nationwide alert warns of university computer infiltration by Russian mob


From: InfoSec News <isn () c4i org>
Date: Wed, 26 Jun 2002 02:58:36 -0500 (CDT)

http://www.siliconvalley.com/mld/siliconvalley/news/editorial/3542736.htm

Tue, June 25, 2002

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The government has issued an alert about identity 
and credit card theft on U.S. campuses, saying individuals linked to 
the Russian mob tried to tap into at least five college computer 
systems.

The warning, which was issued Friday, followed the arrest a 
Russian-born man at Pasadena City College and another incident at 
Arizona State University. Schools in Texas and Florida have also been 
targeted, college officials said.

Officials at the Pasadena campus said the man was arrested last month 
as he tried to install keystroke recording software that could capture 
computer users' credit card numbers and other personal data.

Brian Marr, a spokesman for the Secret Service, said Tuesday he could 
not comment on what he called an ongoing investigation. The security 
alert was issued by the Secret Service along with the Education 
Department.

``The United States Secret Service has been investigating several 
nationwide computer intrusions/hacking incidents,'' according to the 
alert issued by the agency. ``The motives of the perpetrators and the 
number of computer systems compromised remains unknown.''

At Arizona State, a program was apparently installed that allows 
students' credit card numbers, passwords and e-mail to be stolen, 
though it wasn't known if any student accounts had been compromised, 
according to campus police.

Hard drives were seized from 20 ASU computers, said Lt. John Sutton of 
the ASU Department of Public Safety. He wouldn't say how the scam was 
linked to organized crime and declined to identify any suspects.

Technology administrators for the University of California said they 
were warned about Russian organized crime. The incidents are not a 
threat to entire computer systems, administrators said.

``It's basically like rifling through one person's mailbox and hoping 
a credit card is being sent at that time,'' said Ross Stapleton-Gray 
of University of California technical services.



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