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  • 27 Years Old Hacker (Timothy Noirjean) From WashingtonFined & Jailed For Hacking Several Facebook Accounts & Pages



    Washington County district court judge sentenced Woodbury resident Timothy Noirjean to 150 days in jailfive years on probation and more than $15,000 in fines.
    27 year old Noirjean pleaded guilty to 13 counts of electronic identity theft. He was accused of posing as a Facebook friend to an Oakdale woman and hacking her information – and information belonging to her friends. Washington County Attorney Pete Orput said his prosecutors never budged from his assertion in 2011 that the case would not be plea-bargained. “I’m not willing to tell one or several (of the victims) that we dismissed one or several of the counts in return for guilty pleas for the others,” Orput said.
    He said he was committed to getting convictions on the 13 counts – all felonies – due to the harm caused by Noirjean’s actions. After hacking the women’s information, Noirjean posted photos of several of the women on an adult website.
    Orput said that while his office could prosecute Noirjean, it couldn’t legally make the website take down the photos. “That harm goes on forever,” he said.
    Orput said Internet users must be critical when it comes to sharing information, adding that identity theft has emerged as perhaps the most common crime in Washington County. “This case illustrates the need to be very, very safe and vigilant online,” he said. “I hope people just won’t share passwords with anybody.”
    According to a criminal complaint, the woman reported having a Facebook chat with someone she thought was a friend. When the woman logged off Facebook, then attempted to log back in, she learned her password had been changed.
    After gaining access to her Facebook page, she found a link on her page that appeared to have been posted by the friend she had been chatting with earlier. That link led to a sexually explicit website that contained three of the woman’s photos and identified her by first and last name and city of residence. Those photos had been stored in her email account, according to the complaint.
    The woman then realized that she had unwittingly disclosed account information to her chat correspondent, later identified as Noirjean. The friend Noirjean had been posing as also learned her account information had been hacked.
    Police closed in on Noirjean using Internet records. In an interview with police, Noirjean admitted to hacking into or attempting to hack more than 100 accounts. More victims were discovered after a search of Noirjean’s computer.
    As part of the sentence, Tenth District Court Judge Elizabeth Martin ordered Noirjean to pay $1,000 to each of the 13 victims. She also required him to pay more than $2,000 to two women to cover computer expenses.


    -Source (Woodbury Bulletin)



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    WikiLeaks Get Court Victory, Donations By Visa & MasterCard May Resume Soon

    Court victory to WikiLeaks, this Thursday an Icelandic court declared victory in the first round of its campaign against the financial blockade imposed by Visa and MasterCard to WikiLeaks donation. Judge ruled 'Valitor' -Icelandic payments processor to reopen a gateway handling Visa and MasterCard donations to Wikileaks. The court ruled that Valitor must resume processing payments for Wikileaks' partner DataCell within two weeks. If Valitor doesn't, then it must pay a fine of 800,000 Icelandic kronur (USD$6,200) per day until the company complies with the ruling, the Reykjavik district court ruled. 
    WikiLeaks says that the ensuing blockade has led to a 95 percent fall in revenue, something which founder Julian Assange says has forced him to focus on fundraising at the expense of his site's publication work.
    The judgment, handed down by Reykjavik District Court, is "a very important milestone in our campaign,"WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson said in a telephone interview. Lawsuits remain active in Denmark and in Belgium, he said, but the Icelandic win was "a small but very important step in fighting back against these powerful banks."
    DataCell CEO Andreas Fink said the court had dismissed Visa's argument that DataCell should not be allowed to process donations for third parties.
    "The verdict is an important one as the court had to rule on the conditions of the contracts we had with a payment processor which indirectly imposes Visa general rules on us," said Fink. 
    Still neither Visa Inc. nor MasterCard Inc. immediately returned emails seeking comment on the judgment.



    -Source (Newsday & PCW)

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