26 Nov 2009
The author of the first iPhone worm has been given a job with Australian iPhone app developer Mogeneration, much to the disgust of security experts.
Ashley Towns, who is 21, wrote on his Twitter feed earlier today that he had got the job at the firm, which markets itself as Australia's "leading iPhone development company".
The so-called Ikee worm surfaced two weeks ago, targeting jail-broken iPhones. The worm was not malicious in intent, but it is widely believed to have provided the template for the more sinister Duh worm, which appeared over the weekend and is designed to steal online banking credentials.
Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos, argued that the hiring of a known hacker is sending out the wrong signal.
"Don't get me wrong. I don't think virus writers shouldn't be allowed to rehabilitate and do something worthwhile with their lives," he wrote in a blog post.
"But it jars with me that Towns has shown no regret for what he did, and that his utterly irresponsible behaviour appears to have been rewarded. Will Towns be offering a token $5 compensation to all those he infected for the inconvenience he caused? I doubt it."
Rik Ferguson, senior security advisor at Trend Micro, was similarly sceptical about the young hacker's appointment.
"This feels like a PR stunt by the employer," he said. "I don't see any compelling reason 'why him' and can definitely see a few 'why not'."
Towns's case has echoes of Twitter hacker Michael 'Mikeyy' Mooney, who was offered a job at applications developer exqSoft Solutions LLC in April after admitting attacking the micro-blogging site several times and causing widespread disruption.
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Do you agree?
Would you buy software from a firm that hires hackers?
Would you trust the software completely, or would you wonder if this dodgy guy has messed with the software and left a backdoor in it? I'd seriously rethink hiring him, this has to be bad for customer confidence in their products, unless they sell viruses.
Posted by: interested_party 16 Dec 2009
Prejudice: the disease of the uneducated
Lets see: the benign worm is out for a 2 weeks before someone else puts it to an evil use. But the worm developer is being blamed for all the damage and being cast in the same light as evil hackers? Cluley must live in a red state. Or maybe he is jealous Towns beat him to a vulnerability alert...
Posted by: dv 03 Dec 2009
Fine Line
Is he a hacker, or just a talented sofware engineer with a darkside? Seems to me he has some talent, he is afterall THE first person to exploit the flaw. Good luck to him i say.
Posted by: Carl Dean 02 Dec 2009
Keep your enemies closer....
Why not hire this guy who has shown a certain amount of skill tht this company may be ble to use to their benefit?
Posted by: D 28 Nov 2009
get collective lives
Sheesh, these whinging 'security experts'. They get rich from all this stuff and then complain shen someone show up a security hole. "We think he can be rehabilitated" but first, let's tar and feather him
Posted by: Steve 27 Nov 2009