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Melbourne teen pleads guilty to hacking into Apple network Australian boy who hacked into Apple network admired the group, court told
(about 5 hours later)
A Melbourne teenager has pleaded guilty to hacking into the main computer network of Apple, downloading big internal files and accessing customer accounts, because he was a fan of the company. A 16-year-old boy hacked into Apple’s mainframe, downloaded internal files and accessed customer accounts because he was a fan of the company and hoped to work there one day, a Melbourne court has heard.
The boy, 16, who cannot be identified for legal reasons, broke into the company’s mainframe from his suburban home many times over a year, The Age reported, citing statements by the teenager’s lawyer in court. According to The Age newspaper, the boy’s lawyer told the children’s court in Melbourne on Thursday that his client had hacked into the Apple network on multiple occasions over one year because he admired the company.
He downloaded 90 gigabytes of secure files and accessed customer accounts without exposing his identity. When Apple became aware of the intrusion, it contacted the FBI, which referred the matter to the Australian Federal Police, the newspaper said, quoting statements made in court. The boy, who studies in a private school, stored the saved information in a folder titled “hacky hack hack”, the newspaper said.
The report said an AFP raid on the boy’s family home produced two laptops, a mobile phone and a hard drive, which matched the intrusion reported by Apple. The sensitive documents were saved in a folder called “hacky hack hack”. Despite the court being told that the teenager had downloaded 90GB of secure files and accessed customer accounts, Apple the world’s most valuable company has denied that customers were affected.
The report said the boy had boasted about his activities on WhatsApp. The company said it identified the security breach and notified the FBI, which in turn referred the matter to the Australian federal police.
The AFP declined to comment on the grounds that the matter was before the court. An Apple representative in Australia was not immediately available for comment. “At Apple, we vigilantly protect our networks and have dedicated teams of information security professionals that work to detect and respond to threats,” a company spokesman told Guardian Australia in a statement.
The boy is due to be sentenced next month. “In this case, our teams discovered the unauthorised access, contained it, and reported the incident to law enforcement. We regard the data security of our users as one of our greatest responsibilities and want to assure our customers that at no point during this incident was their personal data compromised.”
The Age said customer data had been accessed, and that the boy managed to obtain customers’ authorised keys – their login access.
The AFP searched the teenager’s home last year and seized two computers. The serial numbers of the devices matched those of the devices that had accessed the internal systems, a prosecutor told the court.
The boy also shared details of his hacking with members of a WhatsApp group.
Apple would not specify to Guardian Australia what information had been accessed by the boy, or how they identified the breach.
The boy pleaded guilty and will return to the court for sentencing in September.
Dr Suelette Dreyfus, a privacy expert from from the University of Melbourne’s school of computing and information systems, urged against a punitive sentence.“I have researched a number of teen hacker cases internationally,” Dreyfus said.
“Almost all these teens grew out of the technology boundary-pushing of their youth, and then went on to live useful lives and contributing to society. Putting them in prison is often a waste of that potential.
“Young people often make mistakes when they are exploring and rule-breaking especially online – including boasting about their exploits. It’s not right, but for tech teens, it can be a part of growing up ... there’s usually a really worried teen and family at the end of this sort of court case.”
MelbourneMelbourne
AppleApple
ComputingComputing
HackingHacking
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