Quote:
Originally Posted by HaveToBeAnon
Oh, just another thought while I'm here.
BT have, as you would expect, a whole team of security experts who's job it is the keep the backbone infrastructure secure and reliable, and it has to be said do a pretty good job. What you would not expect is that they weren't even consulted, and discovered about phorm at the same time as the rest of us, ie February, and their head man, I won't mention names so lets call him JR, went absolutely ape-s..t on hearing about it.
Thats an indication of just how secret this has been within BT, keeping it from people who would instantly recognise it for what it was.
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That is quite astonishing! How did Roman Gaufman (aka Hackeron, The Phorm Malware Hacker) managed to sneak into a BT network centre with a 19" rack full of electronic snooping equipment and leave it there like an Elephant in the room during the 2006 and 2007 spying trials?
Who opened the doors to the actual equipment rooms and who showed him which wires to tap into, surely Stratis Scleparis the CTO of BT Retail must have authorised a BT engineer to help Roman do the dirty deads? How come JR hasn't come across the details of at least 6 weeks of someone sneaking around inside the network and no one at BT control saw millions of rogue javascript injection traffic coming from one network section?
And there's more:
The cheek of this guy Stratis Scleparis!!! Pretending to be a good guy helping to fight malware at BT while he was in full knowledge of the fact his secret malware trials where going on under the noses of BT victims at his behest via his malicious rootkit friends Kent Ertugrul of 121Media (aka Phorm)
http://www.networkworld.com/news/200...s-back-at.html
Note: to Phormwatch you need to add 121Media(Phorm) hacker Roman Gaufman onto your entity relationship diagram, he's Stratis lil helper