With a told-you-so grin, Marcos Flávio Assunção reads out four digits – an Internet banking password – that he has just intercepted as a reporter communicates via laptop with a bank’s supposedly secure Web site. “It wouldn’t matter if you were on the other side of the world in Malaysia,” said Mr. Assunção, a confident 22-year-old. “I could still steal your password.” While impressive, Mr. Assunção’s hacking talents are hardly unique in Brazil, where organized crime is rife and laws to prevent digital crime are few and largely ineffective. The country is becoming a laboratory for cybercrime, with hackers – able to collaborate with relative impunity – specializing in identity and data theft, credit card fraud and piracy, as well as online vandalism. “Most of us are hackers, not crackers; good guys just doing it for the challenge, not criminals,” Mr. Assunção said. He insisted that he had never put his talents to criminal use, although he acknowledged that at age 14 he once took down an Internet service provider for a weekend after arguing with its owner. Across the globe, hackers like to classify themselves as white hats (the good guys) or black hats (the bad guys), said one Brazilian expert, Alessio Fon Melozo, the editorial director of Digerati, which publishes a hacker magazine, H4ck3r: The Magazine of the Digital Underworld. “Here in Brazil, though, there are just various shades of gray,” Mr. Melozo said. Full Story
About OODA Analyst
OODA is comprised of a unique team of international experts capable of providing advanced intelligence and analysis, strategy and planning support, risk and threat management, training, decision support, crisis response, and security services to global corporations and governments.