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Buffalo, New York
January 27 2003
A suspected crooked insider at a New York software company sells consumer-credit reports to identity thieves, at roughly $US30 ($A50) a pop, in a high-tech scam that prosecutors say victimises thousands.
An unemployed British computer administrator fights extradition to face federal charges in Virginia and New Jersey that he broke into 92 separate US military and government networks, often getting past easy-to-guess passwords to download sensitive data.
These and other recent data intrusions, whose authors are typically intent on theft, sabotage or cyberterrorism, have given rise to a promising profiling strategy aimed at preventing online break-ins as they happen.
Just as authorities use profiling to guard against criminals at ports and borders, researchers at the State University of New York at Buffalo are developing software that can generate highly personalised profiles of network users by analysing the sequences of commands entered at each computer terminal.
The system - a prototype is likely to be ready for intensive testing this summer - could provide a high-grade layer of protection for military installations and government agencies as well as banking or other commercial networks that require especially tight monitoring.
The software draws up regularly updated profiles by closely tracking over time how each person performs an array of routine tasks, such as opening files, sending email or searching archives.
Designed to tell if someone has strayed into an unauthorised zone or is masquerading as an employee using a stolen password, the program keeps watch for even subtle deviations in behaviour.
Continued @ The Age.
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