Darkode hacking site forced offline
#1
Darkode hacking forum forced offline

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The Darkode forum, which was created about six years ago, can no longer be accessed

Darkode - anotorious hacking forum used by Lizard Squad and other cybercriminals - has been shut down after an investigation carried out by authorities in 20 countries.

"We have dismantled a cyber-hornets' nest... which was believed by many, including the hackers themselves, to be impenetrable," said one of the US state attorneys involved.

Twenty-eight people have been arrested.

They include a 26-year-old man from Coventry, England.

In addition, the UK's National Crime Agency said an address in Paisley, Scotland, had been searched and material removed for examination. It said that five other suspected members of the site had previously been arrested.

The FBI added that dozens of other people linked to the site had been charged or had their property searched as part of the inquiry.

Restricted access

Darkode's members allegedly used the site to trade and to share hacking tools and information, including details of zero-day attacks - techniques that exploited flaws in products that neither their creators nor the wider security industry were aware of, and thus could not be protected against.

This information was password-protected.

"Only those proposed for membership by an existing user could join, but not until they posted a resume of the skills and achievements that could contribute to the criminal community," explained the NCA.

"There was a hierarchical membership structure, and the status of users determined who they could communicate with, and their access to the commodities and services on offer."

Although the site was not accessible to the general public, it was profiled extensively by the security blogger Brian Krebs, who posted several screenshots on his site.

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Botnets - networks of hijacked computers used to mount co-ordinated attacks - were promoted on the site

"Most of the cybercrime forums are in Russian or some other language that's not English, but this was an English-language forum," he told the BBC.

"And it was a sort of meeting ground for cybercriminals from different nationalities and languages.

"A fairly significant number of people were selling botnet services there, and there were also services for deploying malware and phishing."

He added that the forum's visitors included members of Lizard Squad - a group of hackers which has carried out high-profile attacks on Sony, Microsoft and others.

"The guy that was most recently the admin of the forum used the nickname Sp3c," Mr Krebs recalled.

"He was a leading member of the Lizard Squad. What's interesting is that you don't see his name in the lists of those that were apprehended or charged as part of this.

"I don't really know what that means, but there was a definite connection between the Lizard Squad and this forum, at least in the last year or so."

The FBI said that Operation Shrouded Horizon had indicated up to 300 people had used the forum.

"During the investigation, the bureau focused primarily on the Darkode members responsible for developing, distributing, facilitating and supporting the most egregious and complex cybercriminal schemes targeting victims and financial systems," it said.

It added that its counterparts in Australia, Bosnia, Brazil, Israel, Colombia and Nigeria were among those involved in the international crackdown, and that efforts to trace other suspects were "ongoing".

source
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#2
Why don't these guys regroup and hit the FBI? At least they can make the money count.
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#3
Well, depends on their level of organisation and communication. I would say regrouping might be difficult for loose groups, especially if among 28 arrested people were those more high-ranking with more contacts.
There is a possibility that many lower-ranking members dont have contact with others (apart from forum, which has been taken down) so it is difficult to reach out. I could see many smaller groups (2-10 people) might be formed (be it small forums for bigger groups, IRC chats or simple communication between 2 members) without possibility to contact other groups, or those groups are in kind-of competition who will be the "true successor" of the site.
Even if there is contact among some members, it is questionable whether they can authenticate themselves (e.g. using digital signatures - did they exchange keys?), this is quite important so that anonymous members of community know for certain who they are communicating with - simply put, trust issues. In cases like this, especially after crackdown, paranoia might be present and in place.
These are of course all speculations, though problems which occur after group breakdown. There might be other problems or problems are already resolved and group is forming. Nobody knows.
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#4
A mystery it shall remain then. Until...
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#5
Yeah, hit the FBI.

And the CIA.

And the NSA.

Those fuckers already have too much power.
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#6
(Sep 04, 2017, 19:26 pm)RobertX Wrote: Yeah, hit the FBI.

And the CIA.

And the NSA.

Those fuckers already have too much power.

Add the GCSB in for killing MegaUpload
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