Kurdish rebel hacker faces up to 10 years in jail

Filed Under: Law & order

Authorities in Turkey are seeking a ten year jail sentence for a man who has admitted he was a hacker working for the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), and is alleged to have planted spyware on x-rated websites.

According to media reports from the country, prosecutors are seeking the lengthy sentence on charges of "consciously and willingly aiding a terrorist organisation."

A computer belonging to the man, who has only been identified by the initials "R Ç", was found to contain classified information belonging to Turkish General Staff (which oversees the armed forces in the country) and institutions including the General Staff and Turkey's intelligence agency, Milli Istihbarat Teskilati (MIT).

It has been claimed that the hacker stole confidential information belonging to the General Staff, MIT and other institutions through malware he placed on pornographic websites visited by army members. These sensitive documents are said to have been passed to the PKK.

25 years ago, the PKK launched an armed struggle against the Turkish government, demanding an independent Kurdish state within the country.

This conflict may have started at the dawn of the computer virus era, but it seems more and more common today for combat and espionage to spill over onto the internet.

, , , , ,

About the author

Graham Cluley is senior technology consultant at Sophos. The readers of Computer Weekly voted him security blogger of the year in 2009 and 2010, and he pipped Stephen Fry to the title of "Twitter user of the year" too. Which was nice. He was also named "Best Security Blogger" by the readers of SC Magazine in 2011. You can subscribe to Graham's updates on Facebook, follow him on Twitter and circle him on Google Plus for regular updates.