Massive Stolen Credit Card Number Site Shut Down
from the good-work dept
It took quite some time for authorities around the world to recognize the extent to which organized crime was using the internet for various scams and frauds, but in the last year or so, it seems like many agencies around the world really are looking to go after the criminals. The latest example is that Darkmarket, an invitation-only secretive forum for buying and selling credit card numbers, has been shut down, and 60 people involved with the site have been simultaneously arrested. This is definitely a step up from what we were hearing just a couple of years ago, where the best authorities could do was arrest kids messing around with phishing scams, rather than actually going after the organized criminals who were the real issue. Cracking down on one site and arresting 60 individuals isn't going to stop these scammers, but it's at least good to see authorities trying to focus on the real problem cases, rather than just the small fry. Update: As was pointed out in the comments, it appears the original BBC article we relied on has the story a bit wrong. The site itself was actually an FBI-run honeypot. So, while the site was taken down, the story of how the whole process worked is quite different than what was implied in the first article.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: arrests, credit cards, darkmarket, forums, organized crime, scams
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Please Get The Story Straight
http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2008/10/darkmarket-post.html
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Or you could read the story here
I'm all for these kind of stings. I just would of expected the BBC to have done better research before publishing the story. But I suppose the headline "FBI shuts down own website used to trade credit card details" doesn't have quite the same ring to it.
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Could be a problem
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A criminal is a criminal...
I concur that an internet market place for stolen credit card numbers is more important to shut down than a bunch of juvenile delinquents phishing. However, to judge law enforcement efforts based on the significance of a crime seems a bit short sighted. By that measure, police would never bother with shop lifters because their individual crimes are insignificant, even though the amount stolen by shop lifters each year is several billion dollars in the United States. Similarly, police should be unconcerned about people not signaling before changing lanes because this illegal action only causes a few accidents each year.
Phishing for the purpose of stealing is a crime, and I applaud law enforcement efforts to capture criminals, regardless of whether the crime only nets a few hundred dollars or millions.
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How can you be *for* these kinds of stings?
Face the facts. A police force in a free (libre) society is supposed to be a reactionary force for the most part. Increasingly though, police forces are becoming militarized* and what constitute a crime is being spread and stretched.
When murder or rape are no longer the stiffest penalized (provided you don't get the death sentence in the former) there is a serious issue that needs to be addressed.
* Note: militarized in the sense that neutralizing a problem means that the end justifies the means. I like the military, but I know damn well that you don't want it operating in your back yard.
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Re: How can you be *for* these kinds of stings?
Oh, you mean the "Bush Doctrine". Couldn't help but take a poke of fun at the Palin interviews and your comment.
To be more substantive, the world seems to steadily, slowly, skeptically winding down the Minority Report road.
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Re: How can you be *for* these kinds of stings?
Face the facts. A police force in a free (libre) society is supposed to be a reactionary force for the most part.
Says who? I would prefer the police drive through my neighborhood periodically rather than waiting until after someone has burglarized my home. I would argue that police patrols are preventative more than reactive. Counting the amount of time that local law enforcement spends in patrolling versus investigating crime, I would argue that the majority of police time is spent in preventative activities rather than reacting activities.
Increasingly though, police forces are becoming militarized* and what constitute a crime is being spread and stretched.
Gee, and all this time I thought crimes were defined by law, and those laws were adjudicated in courts. You make it sound as though the police are redefining what constitutes a crime. I would like to see some evidence of that.
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Re: Re: How can you be *for* these kinds of stings?
Basically he is. While it isn't extreme to date, there is a lot of "Crime Intervention" that borders on Crime Prevention by proactive vs. reactive. Acting on a crime that a citizen only comtemplates is the future, get in line.
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Re: Re: How can you be *for* these kinds of stings?
I'm all for patrolling and prevention, but I'm not sure how I feel about this one.
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Re: Re: Re: How can you be *for* these kinds of stings?
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Re: How can you be *for* these kinds of stings?
We are each responsible for the actions we take. If you see an opportunity to do something wrong, you have the choice to do it, or to not do it. If you do it, you have to face the consequences. I personally don't believe that running a stolen credit card number website is going to entice anybody to buy stolen card numbers that wouldn't otherwise do it. Even if it did, anybody who's in there knows blame well that what they're doing is illegal, and they deserve to be nailed.
Furthermore, how you can claim that trying to defeat credit card fraud is "stretching the law" is beyond me. Wrong is wrong, regardless of the levels of severity we try to attach to it. And I don't see this as a non-reactionary effort. People were buying and selling stolen credit cards, so the authorities setup a trap to catch them. That's pretty much fits the reactionary description in my book. Honestly, I wish they'd go even further. For example, I would like to see police be more proactive about nailing drunk people that try to drive off from bars after happy hour. Waiting to nail these drunken morons AFTER they've killed or paralyzed someone in accident, to me, seems like too little too late, especially for the families of those that got hurt or killed. Unfortunately, there aren't enough police to go around, so such efforts are futile. I'm happy to see that the FBI was able to successfully nail this ring.
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Re: Re: Re: How can you be *for* these kinds of stings?
As for those who attempt to purchase drugs from police, the police have to be very careful what they say or the sting will be considered entrapment. Should we be concerned regarding how police conduct stings? Yes. However, the only people that will respond to these kinds of stings are people looking for drugs already. They essentially convict themselves.
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Re: Re: How can you be *for* these kinds of stings?
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this isn't the first sting, just the biggest
like all high profile busts of big websites, the members scatter and form smaller groups that are even more underground.
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i love it
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well done
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