Skip to main content

The FBI is breaking into corporate computers to remove malicious code – smart cyber defense or government overreach?

By Scott Shackelford, Indiana University

The FBI has the authority right now to access privately owned computers without their owners’ knowledge or consent, and to delete software. It’s part of a government effort to contain the continuing attacks on corporate networks running Microsoft Exchange software, and it’s an unprecedented intrusion that’s raising legal questions about just how far the government can go.

On April 9, the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas approved a search warrant allowing the U.S. Department of Justice to carry out the operation.

The software the FBI is deleting is malicious code installed by hackers to take control of a victim’s computer. Hackers have used the code to access vast amounts of private email messages and to launch ransomware attacks. The authority the Justice Department relied on and the way the FBI carried out the operation set important precedents. They also raise questions about the power of courts to regulate cybersecurity without the consent of the owners of the targeted computers.

Read the Full Article on dWeb.News at: https://dweb.news/2021/05/05/the-fbi-is-breaking-into-corporate-computers-to-remove-malicious-code-smart-cyber-defense-or-government-overreach/

Photo: FBI Headquarters at night Photo: FBI

#FBI #FederalBureauofInvestigation #cybersecurity #cyberdefense #government #microsoft #microsoftexchange #exchange #ransomware #maliciouscode #hackers #justicedepartment

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

dWeb News

dWeb News Starting tomorrow, the Medcap Forum brings together a hundred companies with over 150 investors Arteche receives favourable report from BME Growth Funding channelled via the stock market grew 6-fold to April, BME highlights during the opening of the MedCap Forum Open edX & Learning Platforms | May – June 2021: Coursera, MasterClass.com, Outlier, Thinkific, Moodle… Funding channelled via the stock market grew 6-fold to April, BME highlights during the opening of the MedCap Forum How Outdated Hiring Practices Can Derail Your Recruitment Efforts Al Zahra Hospital Dubai Pioneers CMR’s Surgical Versius Robotic System for the 1st Time in the MENA Region 5 Reasons Why It’s a Bad Idea to Have Your Company’s Software Developed By an In-house Team By Peter Navarro Here are the upgrades Nintendo’s Switch Pro might have over the original Tools You Need for Online Se...

dWeb News

dWeb News Blue water thinking From Racial Justice to Dirty Air, California’s New AG Plots a Progressive Health Care Agenda Doctors Tell How to Make the Most of Your Telehealth Visits The ‘Grief Pandemic’ Will Torment Americans for Years Readers and Tweeters React to Racism, Inequities in Health Care Exploring Wiltshire with Pevsner: The Estate Villages of Joseph Neeld Billionaire Investor George Soros Strongly Recommends to Buy Coursera’s Stock June’s Bookshop of the Month – Sam Read Bookseller Amazon Prime Day set for June 21-22; tech giant turns to actor Kristen Bell to help counter critics Cosmonauts Exit Station and Begin Spacewalk Blue water thinking Posted: 02 Jun 2021 02:41 AM PDT dWeb.News Article from MIT Technology Review Insights dWeb.News Tech News The names of many of the new companies and technologies created to combat the effec...

dWeb News

dWeb News Bango: Digital advertising is not a reliable source of new customers 5 Signs a VPN Isn’t Trustworthy  Coinbase lets you pay for bitcoin and other cryptos with PayPal EU accuses Apple of anti-competitive behavior in Spotify antitrust case How to be an in-demand cloud geek JetBrains takes TeamCity CI/CD to the cloud The tactics police are using to prevent bystander video Cloud infrastructure spending grew 35% to $41.8B in Q1 2021 Amazon posts record profits as AWS hits $54B annual run rate Samsung might be working on an exciting new kind of foldable phone Bango: Digital advertising is not a reliable source of new customers Posted: 30 Apr 2021 04:39 AM PDT CEOs don’t see the value of digital marketing because they aren’t tied to sales, martech company Bango said in its Board to Death report. Read More 5 Signs a VPN Isn’t Trustworthy...