[ISN] Pentagon Hacker Wins Praise

From: Jason Terwilliger <jlt8903_at_osfmail.isc.rit.edu>
Date: Thu 19 Mar 1998 - 12:35:40 CST
	  Filed at 11:15 a.m. EST

          By The Associated Press

          JERUSALEM (AP) -- Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu today
	  praised an 18-year-old Israeli master hacker accused of having
	  launched the most organized attack ever on the Pentagon's
	  computer system. 

          ``Damn good,'' Netanyahu said when asked what he thought of the
	  hacker, who was put under house arrest Wednesday and had his
	  computer taken away. ``Very dangerous, too,'' Netanyahu added
	  quickly. 

          The suspect, who calls himself ``The Analyzer'' and was
	  identified by the U.S. Justice Department as Ehud Tenebaum, was
	  questioned today by a special police anti-hacker unit. 

          Police Brig. Gen. Elihu Ben-Onn said the suspect was cooperating
	  with investigators, who don't think he was seeking personal
	  gain. 

          ``This guy didn't act for what we call criminal motives, only
	  for his curiosity, his ego, or any other motive -- not for
	  money,'' Ben-Onn said. ``He's not so proud (now) of what he's
	  done.'' 

          The Pentagon has said the intrusions appeared to have been aimed
	  at systems that contained unclassified personnel and payroll
	  records. A spokesman described the Israeli hacker's work as the
	  most organized and systematic attack the Pentagon has seen to
          date. 

          ``The Analyzer'' and two teens from Cloverdale, Calif.,
	  apparently penetrated computers in February using a weakness
	  that already had been identified by computer security teams. 

          Tenebaum, who lives in the well-to-do Israeli suburb of Hod
	  Hasharon, was arrested along with two Israeli friends from the
	  neighborhood, at the request of U.S. officials. He
          has not been charged. 

          ``He was not surprised, because the story was already in the
	  press,'' Ben-Onn said. ``He knew that someday someone would
	  knock at his door.'' 

          Tenebaum's high school principal described him as a high
	  achiever at the Mosenson Youth Village school, which has an
	  advanced curriculum in science, computers and
          communications, and its own TV studio. 

          ``We are sorry about what happened,'' said the principal, 	
	  Yitzhak Chen. ``On the other hand, he didn't exploit this for a
	  bad cause.'' Chen said the school would talk to students
          about hacking, and explain that it was a serious violation of
	  the law. 


Copyright 1998 The New York Times Company 




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Received on Thu Mar 19 11:43:16 1998
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