A teenager charged with hacking offences and believed to be a leading member of the Anonymous and LulzSec online activist groups was released on bail in a London court yesterday on condition he did not use the Internet. Jake Davis, 18, who goes by the online nickname of ‘Topiary’, was charged with computer attacks on Sony, UK crime and health authorities and Rupert Murdoch’s UK newspaper arm News International. Anonymous and LulzSec members have been arrested in the US, Spain, Turkey, Britain and the Netherlands in recent weeks in a crackdown on attacks on targets seen by the activists as hostile to Internet freedom of speech. The arrest of ‘Topiary’ in Scotland’s remote Shetland Islands may be the most significant to date in the global effort to end the cyber-crime spree by the groups. Davis, a slight, dark-haired youth who spoke only to confirm his name and date of birth and suppressed a smile when the prosecutor struggled to prounouce ‘LulzSec’, was released on bail under strict conditions. He will be allowed no Internet access and will live under a curfew with his mother and brother, who have just moved to Lincolnshire in eastern England and have not yet arranged a broadband connection. His lawyer, Gideon Cammerman, said that while Davis had helped to publicise the work of the cyber activists, there was no evidence to show he had the expertise to have taken part in any of the hacks. “The picture that emerges is not one of a skilled and practised hacker but of someone who sympathises,” he said. LulzSec and its parent group Anonymous, loose online collectives of activists, have attracted widespread global media coverage for their stunts. LulzSec has more than 350,000 followers on Twitter. The prosecution yesterday said that police had seized a Dell laptop from Davis’s home in Shetland with a 100 gigabyte drive running 16 different virtual computers. Files found on the computer included details of an attack on Sony, e-mail addresses and passwords of hundreds of thousands of members of the public and hundreds of other folders that had not yet been examined, the prosecutor said. When police arrived to arrest Davis, his computer screen was displaying a dialogue box for a single-use e-mail address with a lifespan of 10 minutes, the prosecution said. Forty other applications were also running. The Shetland Islands, off the northeast coast of Scotland, have some of Britain’s poorest Internet connections, with no superfast broadband availability and an average speed of 5.5 megabits per second, according to telecoms regulator Ofcom. Davis, who has no previous criminal convictions, is due to appear for his first trial hearing on August 30 in Southwark Crown Court, London.
GMT 18:06 2018 Tuesday ,09 January
10 migrants dead, dozens missing off Libya coastGMT 22:05 2018 Wednesday ,03 January
US says airstrike kills 2 militants in SomaliaGMT 18:56 2018 Wednesday ,03 January
Philippines prohibits US firm call center from expanding after deadly fireGMT 17:03 2018 Wednesday ,03 January
Severe storm batters western Europe; 1 dead, 15 injuredGMT 16:32 2018 Wednesday ,03 January
Palestinian shot dead in West Bank clashes with Israeli army: ministryGMT 11:49 2018 Wednesday ,03 January
Russian helicopter crashes in Syria, two dead: MoscowGMT 17:22 2017 Thursday ,28 December
10 hurt in Saint Petersburg supermarket bombingGMT 17:49 2017 Wednesday ,27 December
Blast in Saint Petersburg injures four, say officialsMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor