The four Chinese cyber-criminals behind the
Fujacks worm
have been jailed by a Chinese court.
Fujacks caused havoc earlier this year when it covertly stole usernames and
passwords from online gamers, and converted icons of infected programs into a
picture of a panda burning joss-sticks.
Li Jun, who confessed to writing the worm and selling it to 12 clients for
more than ¥100,000 yuan (£6,250) was sentenced to four years in prison by a
court in Xiantao in Hubei province.
Wang Lei, Zhang Shun and Lei Lei were sentenced to between one year and two
and a half years in jail for their part in the scheme.
"Chinese cyber-criminals are not just hitting PCs in their own country, but
affecting computer users worldwide, so it is encouraging to see the authorities
taking action against the perpetrators," said Graham Cluley, senior technology
consultant at
Sophos.
"A surprising proportion of malware written in China is designed to steal
credentials from players of massively multi-player online role-playing games."
Chinese authorities said that the majority of the Fujacks infections have
been dealt with after police persuaded Li Jun to write a counter-agent to his
program to clean-up infected computers.
"Despite the worm's author writing a program to clean up his infestation, it
does not seem to have gained him much sympathy from the authorities," noted
Cluley.
Chinese hackers have been making the headlines recently. Online attacks on
governments in the US, UK and Germany have been
blamed on Chinese
hackers working for the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA), a claim that
China has strongly
denied.
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