• Mikeyy Worm Writer Gets Hired

    Mikeyy Worm Writer Gets Hired

    Techtree News Staff, Apr 20, 2009 1323 hrs IST

    Releases a new celeb-targeted worm

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Last week, apart from Ashton Kutcher-CNN race to get a million followers, Twitter witnessed ruckus created by the Mikeyy Worm. Michael 'Mikeyy' Mooney, a 17-year old Brooklyn-based teen had created this Mikeyy worm just out of 'boredom'. Travis Rowland, founder of ExqSoft, decided not to let Mooney get bored any more and hired him! ABCNews reported the confirmation of Mooney accepting the job at ExqSoft.

In an interview with CNET News, Rowland said that he saw the worms on Twitter and was impressed with Mooney's skills so he contacted him about working for him doing security analysis. After joining the job, Mooney had released yet another Twitter worm.

Surprisingly, as per Mooney, Twitter never responded when he tried contacting them directly. Mooney told CNET News, "I just want to let (Twitters) know that my intent is not to aggravate them. It's probably not the best way, but it's the only way I can reach out to Twitter so they will fix the vulnerability."

If we consider Mooney's defense, then he did try to contact Twitter executives but they never responded. And in response, the kid created a 'benign' worm that didn't compromise password of Twitter users.

Graham Cluley, security analyst at Sophos, pointed out at official Sophos Blog that the new fifth 'Mikeyy' variant worm targets celebrity profile accounts like Oprah, The New York Times and others. The new worm sends messages targeted at new celebs and few of those many messages include:

@oprah - sup? welcome to twitter - mikeyy
@TheEllenShow - hey baby, love me long time? - mikeyy
@nytimes - yep, it's true - mikeyy
@StephenColbert - you funny - mikeyy
@aplusk - hey, homo - mikeyy
@souljaboytellem - your music sucks dude - mikeyy

Cluley criticized Rowland's decision of hiring Mooney and believed that the kid put Twitter users at risk of having their identities stolen or malware installed on their machines by financially-motivated hackers. Such hackers could've used the cross-site scripting exploit that Mooney used.

In defense, Rowland said that Mooney did a favor by alerting Twitter about the security flaws and believes that the kid had a potential white hat hacker career with proper influence and guidance.

After playing a serious security prank online, the security firms hire such 'bored' brains and put them to best use. In Mooney's case it was financially harmless (to users at least) prank that pointed out a flaw.

We aren't sure that playing a security prank on one of the popular sites or services can get you a great job, but it might land you in jail for sure. We hope that the other teenagers do not go the 'Monkeys see, Monkeys do' way following Mooney.

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Discussion Board
(2) Comments
lol
,aaaa, on Apr 26, 2009 09:13 PM
<script>document.write("are you serious")</script>
britney
,calvin, on Apr 22, 2009 09:42 PM
omg!!!!!!! this dude goes to my school! aaaaaaaaaa i heard about this this morning and i had to find out the truth.... but i should just ask him write? lol. no.... he don't speak to the younger. well good luck mikeyy. ..........♥

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