A 26 year old student has been sentenced to jail for hacking into the social media giant Facebook from his bedroom at his parents’ house in April and May of last year. Glenn Mangham claims that he did so in order to point out security frailties that the website has, but the prosecution argued, and the judge agreed, that this was not the motive behind his actions. The hacking cost Facebook around $200,000 to rectify and had “real consequences and very serious potential consequences.”
Facebook is the world’s largest social network, with more than 800m registered users around the entire world and, as such, it is a constant target for spammers, hackers, and those looking to use the site for illegal gains. Security and privacy have been a constant sub-plot to the emergence of one of the world’s largest and most intriguing business stories and this has helped make Facebook one of the most high profile targets.
Computer Student
Glenn Mangham was a software development student living in his parents’ home in York while studying. From the bedroom of that home he managed to hack into the account of a Facebook employee who was on holiday, target several servers, and bypass the company’s security system. However, Mr Mangham feared that he would be discovered and so tried erasing his steps. In June 2011, the FBI tracked down Mr Mangham to his home address and subsequently arrested the man, who is said to be an Asperger Syndrome sufferer.
Identify Vulnerabilities
When defending himself in court, Mr Mangham had said his intention “was to identify vulnerabilities in the system so I could compile a report that I could then bundle over to Facebook and show them what was wrong with their system.”
Judgement
Judge McReath, however, said that the actions were not those of “harmless experimentation” and that Mangham had undertaken “persistent conduct, sophisticated conduct and conduct that had at least the risk of putting in danger the reputation of an innocent employee of Facebook” before stating that his actions meant a custodial sentence was inevitable for the crimes committed. Mr Mangham will also have his access to the Internet restricted and will have to give up his computer equipment.






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