Source |
Network World |
Identifiant |
357127 |
Date de publication |
2017-04-17 06:19:00 (vue: 2017-04-17 06:19:00) |
Titre |
Cybercrime-from inside an Ohio prison |
Texte |
Plenty of companies have smart, resourceful IT teams that diligently support their organization's computers and networking operations. But I'm not sure how many of them could pull off the technological tricks that a group of inmates at Ohio's Marion Correctional Institution did.From e-waste to identity theft
According to local news reports that blew up over the internet last week, at least five prisoners built a pair of working PC out of parts scavenged from e-waste as part of a program designed to teach computer skills by having inmates break down end-of-life computers and recycle the parts. The inmates smuggled the PCs to a training room, hid them in the ceiling and then ran wiring to connect to the prison network.To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here |
Envoyé |
Oui |
Condensat |
according article blew break built but ceiling click comment companies computer computers connect correctional could cybercrime designed did diligently down end five from full group have having here hid how identity inmates inside institution internet last least leave life local many marion network networking news not off ohio operations organization out over pair part parts pcs please plenty prison prisoners program pull ran read recycle reports resourceful room scavenged skills smart smuggled support sure teach teams technological theft them then training tricks waste week wiring working |
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