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January 2005, Week 5

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Subject:
From:
John Clogg <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
John Clogg <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 31 Jan 2005 11:38:34 -0800
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This guy got off too easy.  If he had stolen an amount of money equal to
the amount his antics cost his victims, they would have locked him up
for several years.  I understand the perpetrator's age was a factor, but
I hope this doesn't indicate that the courts still regard this type of
crime as a prank.

-----Original Message-----
From: HP-3000 Systems Discussion [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On
Behalf Of Brian Donaldson
Sent: Saturday, January 29, 2005 9:50 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: OT: Teen Sentenced for Releasing Blaster Worm Variant

Teen Sentenced for Releasing Blaster Worm Variant
By GENE JOHNSON, AP


SEATTLE (Jan. 28) - A Minnesota man was sentenced Friday to 18 months in
prison and 10 months of community service after pleading guilty to
unleashing a variant of the Blaster Internet worm in 2003.



AP
Jeffrey Lee Parson, right, walks out of a federal courthouse in Seattle
with his lawyers following his sentence.


Jeffrey Lee Parson, 19, of Hopkins, Minnesota, was a high school senior
when he downloaded and modified the worm. His variant launched a
distributed denial-of-service attack against a Microsoft Corp. Web site
as
well as personal computers.

The government estimated Parson's version of Blaster crippled more than
48,000 computers.

Parson initially pleaded innocent, but changed his plea last summer to
one
count of intentionally causing or attempting to cause damage to a
protected
computer.


U.S. District Judge Marsha Pechman said she was sentencing him at the
low
end of the agreed-upon range because although he was 18 at the time of
the
attack his maturity level was much younger than that.

Parson will serve his time at a low-security prison. He had faced a
maximum
penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 (191,790) fine.

"I know I've made a huge mistake and I hurt a lot of people and I feel
terrible," Parson told the judge.

Collectively, different versions of the virus-like worm, alternately
called
LovSan or Blaster, snarled corporate computer networks worldwide,
affecting
millions of machines.


01/28/05 15:42 EST

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