Help Wanted From Convicted Cybercriminals
Rather than languishing in jail for their crimes, could former fraudsters turn to legitimate cybersecurity work? African cyber expert's recommendation resurrects that debate.
Jail-related security coverage examines how cybercrime investigations, prosecutions, and prison systems intersect with digital evidence and network security.
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Background for this topic.
Jail is a containment mechanism that restricts a process or user to a defined environment, such as selected files, system resources, processes, and network access. The term commonly describes operating-system features such as Unix-style filesystem jails, rather than a physical facility or a general-purpose virtual machine.
Jails limit the damage a compromised service or untrusted program can cause, but they are not automatically a complete security boundary. A vulnerable kernel or jail implementation, excessive privileges, exposed sockets, writable host paths, or incorrect resource and network rules can enable escape or access beyond the intended scope. Secure operation therefore requires least-privilege configuration, separation of sensitive data, patching the host and jailed software, and monitoring both the jail and its controlling interfaces. In vulnerability management and incident response, defenders should verify whether suspected activity remained confined and treat a jail escape as host-level compromise.
Rather than languishing in jail for their crimes, could former fraudsters turn to legitimate cybersecurity work? African cyber expert's recommendation resurrects that debate.
More than 5,000 victims claimed over a 3-year period but filing reckons accused didn't even use a VPN A Baltimore man faces a potential maximum 20-year prison sentence after being charged for his alleged role in running an online service that sold personal data which was later used for financial fraud.…
Conor Brian Fitzpatrick has been sentenced to time served and 20 years of supervised release for his role as the creator and administrator of BreachForums