2011年10月10日星期一

Sex, Drugs, and the Biggest Cybercrime of All Time

Theyd been high all weekend long on Ecstasy, coke, mushrooms and acid so there seemed Rosetta Stone Outlet little harm in doing one last bump of Special K while they packed up to leave their $5,000-a-night duplex in South Beach. For the past three days, the three friends had barely bothered leaving their hotel, as a dozen club kids in town for Winter Music Conference, the annual festival that draws DJs and ravers from all over the world, flocked to their luxury suite to partake of the drug smorgasbord laid out on the coffee table. But even stoned on industrial-grade horse tranquilizers, Albert Gonzalez remained focused on business checking his laptop constantly, keeping tabs Rosetta Stone V3 on the rogue operators he employed in Turkey and Latvia and China, pushing, haranguing, issuing orders into his cellphone in a steady voice. "Lets see if this Russian asshole has what I need," hed say calmly. Then he would help himself to glass plates of powder, each thoughtfully cut into letters for easy identification: "E" for Ecstasy, "C" for coke. Photos: Inside the Wild Lifestlye of the Hackers Who Pulled Off Historys Greatest CybercrimeAlberts two friends were in no shape to think about work. Stephen Watt, a freakishly tall bodybuilder, was planted on the big leather sofa, immobile as the hotel suites potted palm. Only 23, Watt was the groups coding genius, who until recently had been employed in the IT department at Morgan Stanley, the giant Wall Street investment bank. Patrick Toey, 22, Alberts most loyal foot soldier Rosetta Stone French, was lazing around the suite, staring at the Miami seascape through the two-story picture windows, letting his thoughts drift.This article appeared in the June 10, 2010 issue of Rosetta Stone. The issue is available in the online archive."Listen, I need you to do this now," Albert was saying in a firm voice as he set his laptop on the desk in the master bedroom upstairs. For weeks, he had been badgering Stephen, known in hacker circles as the "Unix Terrorist," to refine a crucial bit of code for him. They were in the midst of pulling off the biggest cybercrime ever Cheap Rosetta Stone V3 perpetrated: hacking into the databases of some 250 companies including BarnesNoble, OfficeMax, 7-Eleven, Boston Market, Sports Authority and DSW and stealing 170 million credit-card numbers.

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