The little hacker, who is said to have been involved with computers since the age of nine, contributed to the crash of some sites and accessed information belonging to users and administrators on others. The attacks took a number of sites offline for up to two days, at a cost estimated by Police of $60,000 in damages. A more detailed report is due to be handed over next month when the boy is sentenced.
The Grade 5 student from the Montreal suburb of Notre-Dame- de-Grâce appeared in youth court last Thursday dressed in his school uniform and accompanied by his father. He pleaded guilty to three charges relating to the hacking of websites, including those of Montreal police, the Quebec Institute of Public Health, the Chilean government, and several non-public sites. The court was told that the boy initiated his attacks using several methods:
- DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) – which floods the servers with requests, overloading a site’s resources until it eventually becomes unusable.
- Defacement of pages – inserting propaganda
- Exploiting security holes – in order to access database servers.
According to the newspaper report, his defense lawyer told the court that the boy’s actions were not politically motivated:
He saw it as a challenge, he was only 12 years old. There was no political purpose.
They sure start at a young age in Canada – in 2000, a 15-year-old Montreal boy, know as ‘Mafiaboy’, was responsible for an estimated $1.7 billion damage through hacking. He was sentenced to eight months in youth detention and subsequently received several job offers in cybersecurity. Perhaps it’s the cold climate?
It begs the question of how society should best deal with these young offenders. Are serious and personally damaging penalties warranted at such a young age? On the other hand, should they be rewarded for their crimes with job offers? It also makes one wonder about the levels of security adopted by these sites, if a 12 year old can exploit them, just how secure are their security arrangements?
What do you think?
I wonder what procedures you have in mind to prevent this kind of stuff, Mr. Jim Hillier.
If his motives were intentional, I feel that we shouldn’t go easy on him.
Offering them jobs? It’s like rewarding the criminal and showering him with gifts.
Completely true, the security of the sites are in question, no doubt.
Kids these days, hacking sites, skateboarding, and playing the flute. What have we done to this generation?
I vote for legalizing spanking, the boy needs one, that’s for sure.