British hackers jailed for helping spread worm

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Two British hackers were jailed on Friday for helping to spread a computer worm which affected thousands of machines around the world including some at the U.S. Department of Defense.

Two British hackers were jailed on Friday for helping to spread a computer worm which affected thousands of machines around the world including some at the U.S. Department of Defense.

Jordan Bradley, 22, and Andrew Harvey, 23, were part of an international hacking group called "TH34t Krew" which created the "TK worm", a so-called "Trojan" program that surfaced on the Internet some time before February 2003.

Likened to the wooden Trojan Horse of Greek mythology which concealed enemy soldiers, "Trojans" are malicious computer programs that are disguised as harmless information and can make their way on to a computer over the Internet.

Officers from Britain's National Hi-Tech Crime Unit (NHTCU) estimated the TK worm caused millions of pounds worth of damage, infecting some 18,000 computers around the world.

The program could also take control of computers it infected.

Electrician Harvey was jailed for six months and unemployed Bradley imprisoned for three months at Newcastle Crown Court.

The men, both from northern England, had admitted conspiring to "effect unauthorized modifications to the contents of computers with the intent to impair the operation of those computers".

British police said in a separate trial held in the U.S. in June, 21-year-old American Raymond Steigerwalt from Indiana was jailed for 21 months and ordered to pay the U.S. Department of Defense $12,000 restitution costs for his role in the plot.

Detective Superintendent Mick Deats, deputy head of the NHTCU, said organized criminals were increasingly using such worms to commit crime over the Internet.

"Companies are taking the brunt of their attempts to steal money and data, but consumers are also being hit," he said.

"This year, 166 companies responding to our survey into the cost of hi-tech crime said that they had lost over 70 million pounds ($124.1 million) to viruses, worms or Trojans."

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