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Published on January 2nd, 2015 📆 | 2043 Views ⚑

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The Most Dangerous People on the Internet Right Now


iSpeech.org

National Security Agency

Sure the NSA is not the most dangerous in the traditional sense. After all, the agency is supposed to be there for our good, right? Or at least the good of American citizens. But 18 months of revelations about the agencyā€™s seemingly endless surveillance activitiesā€”and those of its UK partner GCHQā€”have made it clear that many of its actions present a real danger to the internet. Yes, the NSA is tasked with collecting signals intelligence against targets suspected of being a national security threat. But installing backdoors in products, weakening encryption standards and algorithms, hacking entire telecom networks and tapping the undersea cables of private companies like Google and Yahoo show just how dangerous and out of control the agency can be. The internet is still a Wild West, but the NSA may just be its biggest outlaw.

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Harris Corporation vs. U.S. Marshals Service

The Harris Corporation and the U.S. Marshals Service are tied for going above and beyond to conceal information from the public, courts and defendants about law enforcementā€™s use of so-called stingray technology. Harris is the leading maker of stingrays for law enforcement, which simulate a cell tower to trick mobile phones and other devices into connecting to them and revealing their location. Federal and local law enforcement agencies around the county have been using the devices for yearsā€”in some cases bypassing courts altogether to use them without a warrant or deceiving judges about what theyā€™re using to collect the location information. Why? They say itā€™s because Harrisā€™s contract includes an NDA thatprohibits customers from telling anyone, including judges, about their use of the technology. Itā€™s hard to know whoā€™s really initiating the secrecy, thoughā€”Harris, because it wants to protect its proprietary secrets from competitors, or law enforcement agencies, because theyā€™re worried suspects will find ways to counteract the devices. The secrecy reached an extreme level this year when agents with the U.S. Marshals Service in Florida swooped in to seize public records about the use of stingrays to keep them out of the hands of the ACLU.

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Edward Snowden

Depending on where you sit, the NSA whistleblower is either the most dangerous man on the internet or the most heroic. Maybe heā€™s both. Eighteen months into the release of his leaked documents, the world has learned about the NSAā€™s unconstitutional bulk collection of phone records; its efforts to undermine and weaken encryption used not only by ordinary citizens but by the U.S. government itself; its battle with companies like Yahoo and Google to get their customer data; and its offensive operation against system administrators at telecoms to undermine their cellular networks. In the view of some, Snowden has dangerously exposed critical intelligence operations aimed at combating would-be terrorists and other enemies of the state; but to others heā€™s shone a much-needed spotlight on programs that skirt the edges of the law or, in the case of the bulk phone records collection program, trample it altogether. And more than a year after the leaks began, the revelations are still coming.

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Kim Jong-un

Because whether North Korea was behind the Sony hack, the mere suggestion that Kim Jong-un was somehow responsible for the intrusion and threats against theaters got Sony to first cancel the release of The Interview then debut it online to a record $18 million in sales, making it the first time a major studio film was released online the same day it launched in theaters. Film-goers have been trying for years to get studios to release video-on-demand simultaneously with theater releases, but Kim Jong-un, or a perceived threat from him, accomplished the feat in a matter of days. All of this means that in addition to having a dangerous arsenal of nuclear weapons, Kim Jong-un is a dangerous market influencer.

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Cody Wilson

Cody Wilson may be only 26 years old, but heā€™s already made a career out of a series of the most controversial digital projects ever conceived. A radical libertarian, Wilson rose to fame as the creator of the Liberator, the worldā€™s first fully 3-D printable gun. His goal: to let anyone create a lethal plastic weapon with a click anywhere in the world, and in doing so demonstrate how new technologies can render the entire notion of regulation obsolete. More recently, heā€™s collaborated with Amir Taaki on Dark Wallet, an application designed to make bitcoins untraceable. And in October he launched the Ghost Gunner, a computer-controlled milling machine designed to let anyone create a metal body for an AR-15 from a simple blueprint.

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Amir Taaki

As bitcoin becomes increasingly tamed and regulated by mainstream financial institutions, Amir Taaki has fought to bring the cryptocurrency back to its roots: independent, uncontrollable and deeply subversive. With his partner in thoughtcrime Cody Wilson, Taaki has led the development of Dark Wallet, the program designed to allow bitcoins to be spent untraceably, ensuring their use in the Dark Web economy and other less-than-legal applications. Earlier this year, he also won a Toronto hackathon by coding DarkMarket, a prototype for an entirely peer-to-peer bitcoin marketā€”like Silk Road but without any central server or administratorā€”that could make online black market commerce thatā€™s practically immune from a law enforcement crackdown.

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Verto

With the death of Silk Road and more recently Silk Road 2, all eyes on the Dark Web have turned to Evolution, their successor for title of the internetā€™s top anonymous market. The figure behind this hidden site? A pseudonymous black market kingpin who goes by the name Verto, and who also founded the Tor Carding Forum, an anonymous marketplace for stolen credit card numbers. Unlike the Dread Pirate Roberts or Defcon, the talkative administrators of Silk Road and its sequel, Verto has kept a low profile as Evolution has grown to amass more than 22,000 listings of mostly illegal products. And unlike Silk Road, which confined itself to the sale of drugs and counterfeit documents, Evolution also offers weapons and stolen bank account credentials, a sign that the Dark Web could become far darker under Vertoā€™s reign.

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Preet Bharara

Get caught committing a high profile crime anywhere on the internet, and thereā€™s a good chance Preet Bharara will be the face that haunts your nightmares. Bharara has made the Southern District of New York a top jurisdiction for computer crime cases, and prosecuted some of the most high-profile felony cases of the last several years, from Stratfor hacker Jeremy Hammond to alleged Silk Road kingpin Ross Ulbricht. Heā€™s still pursuing the extradition of Megaupload creator Kim Dotcom. And this year he oversaw the U.S. Department of Justiceā€™s role in Operation Onymous, which took down dozens of Dark Web markets, including Silk Road 2 and two of the other top six online drug markets. With the resignation of Attorney General Eric Holder, Bhararaā€™s name has been floated as one of the top candidates for the nationā€™s top justice job. Hackers beware.

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