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Topic: Ehud Tenebaum


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In the News (Thu 31 Dec 09)

  
  CNN - Hacker suspect called 'damn good ... and dangerous' - March 19, 1998
Ehud Tenebaum, known as the "Analyzer," is one of several people arrested in connection with break-ins of U.S. government computers.
Tenebaum and two alleged accomplices, all 18, were questioned on Wednesday for several hours at a police station in Bat Yam, a southern suburb of Tel Aviv, then put under house arrest.
Tenebaum told interviewers before his arrest that he broke into the computers of big institutions to develop his skills and not to cause damage or uncover secrets.
www.cnn.com /TECH/computing/9803/19/hackers   (655 words)

  
 'Analyzer' pleads Guilty   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Ehud Tenebaum, the Israeli hacker famous as "The Analyzer," has plead guilty in Israel to the 1998 attacks on unclassified U.S. Defense Department systems that once touched off alarms at the highest levels of government.
Tenebaum, now CTO at computer security consultancy 2XS, declined to comment on the plea, except to say he's hoping to receive probation.
The Tenebaum case began in February, 1998, when dozens of Pentagon systems were suffering what then-U.S. deputy defense secretary John Hamre called "the most organized and systematic attack to date" on U.S. military systems.
www.securityfocus.com /print/news/133   (479 words)

  
 Pentagon hacker ‘Analyzer’ pleads guilty | The Register
Ehud Tenebaum, the Israeli hacker famous as "The Analyzer," has pleaded guilty in Israel to the 1998 attacks on unclassified US Defence Department systems that once touched off alarms at the highest levels of government.
Tenebaum, now chief technology officer at computer security consultancy 2XS, declined to comment on the plea, except to say that he's hoping to receive probation.
The Tenebaum case began in February, 1998, when dozens of Pentagon systems were suffering what then-US Deputy Defence Secretary John Hamre called "the most organized and systematic attack to date" on US military systems.
theregister.co.uk /2001/01/09/pentagon_hacker_analyzer_pleads_guilty   (605 words)

  
 Pentagon Hacker Quizzed In Israel - CBS News
The suspect, who calls himself “The Analyzer” and was identified by the U.S. Justice Department as Ehud Tenebaum, was questioned by a special police anti-hacker unit.
Tenebaum, who lives in the well-to-do Israeli suburb of Hod Hasharon, was arrested along with two Israeli friends from the neighborhood, at the request of U.S. officials.
Tenebaum's high school principal described him as a high achiever at the Mosenson Youth Village school, which has an advanced curriculum in science, computers, and communications.
www.cbsnews.com /stories/1998/03/18/tech/main5287.shtml   (441 words)

  
 Wired
Cracker Pal Turns on Analyzer-One of the four Israelis indicted with Ehud Tenebaum in February for cracking into US and Israeli government computer systems last year has agreed to testify against Tenebaum in exchange for a lighter sentence.
Analyzer Takes Notoriety to the Bank- Ehud Tenebaum, the Israeli cracker who claims to have broken into hundreds of non-classified US Defense Department computer systems, is now pitching computers.
Analyzer Headed for Army, Fame- Ehud Tenebaum, the Israeli teen recently arrested for breaking into US military Web servers, will reportedly enter the Israeli army this weekend to fulfill his national service obligation.
www.iss.net /security_center/advice/News/Subjects/Pentagon_Hacks/Wired   (509 words)

  
 Whiz-kid hacker caught
In a way, Ehud Tenebaum was right -- it took at least four other agencies, including the Israeli National Police, to catch the suspected cyberspace burglar and two of his underground sidekicks, ending a six-week search.
Among the most-wanted hackers since he spawned hundreds of break-ins in February, Tenebaum had said in an online interview that he was considering quitting hacking, and had even sent the FBI passwords that he'd stolen, handing them off to an acquaintance who runs an online security site to prove he was who he said.
Tenebaum is scheduled to appear before a judge today.
www.newdimensions.net /headlines/caught.htm   (1011 words)

  
 Israeli hacker was in cahoots with Cloverdale hackers   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
(SFGate) [3.20.98] Ehud Tenebaum, the Israeli teenager accused of orchestrating attacks on computer systems at the Pentagon, the University of California and hundreds of other locations, was in daily contact with two Cloverdale teenagers suspected of similar capers, according to authorities.
Tenebaum, who has boasted about being an online mentor to the two Cloverdale hackers, was apprehended Wednesday and placed under house arrest in a suburb of Tel Aviv.
Jasper said he monitored the conversations between Tenebaum and the two Californians and that the relationship appeared to be one of mentor and pupils.
www.newdimensions.net /headlines/clover.htm   (451 words)

  
 EXN.ca | Technology
A number of Internet service providers (ISPs) and US universities are planning to file civil suits against members of the ViRii computer hacking group, claiming hundreds of thousands of dollars in lost revenues and damage to their systems.
The ViRii group, allegedly headed by Ehud Tenebaum, an Israeli teenager, and Calidan Levi Coffman, 20, of Carson, Washington, considered one of the group's ringleaders, has been accused of breaking into numerous US and Israeli government computer systems, as well as business and university computer networks.
Tenebaum, known as the "Analyzer," was arrested last week by the Israeli National Police.
www.exn.ca /Stories/1998/03/23/57.asp   (837 words)

  
 Forbes.com - Magazine Article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
The group is best known for the activities of one of its members: Ehud Tenebaum, a.k.a.
Tenebaum has become a national hero and has even appeared in a newspaper ad for Newron computers, which are manufactured by the Israeli company EIM.
After all, if the 18-year-old Tenebaum gets off with a mere slap on the wrist--then, as an Israeli, he has only one choice: Join the Army.
www.forbes.com /1998/04/17/feat_side2_print.html   (342 words)

  
 THE BLANKET * Index: Current Articles
Ehud Tenenbaum is a young man who Benjamin Netanyahu noticed and noted at the time of Tenenbaum's arrest in 1998, as "damn good ".
Ehud was indeed a dangerous variable in our security system just prior to 9-11.
As U.S. troops, combated aircraft and warships gathered in the Persian Gulf February of 1998, Ehud Tenenbaum was about to be arrested for hacking into the Pentagon in what then US Deputy Defence Secretary John Hamre called, "the most organized and systematic attack to date" on US military systems.
lark.phoblacht.net /chomskybot.html   (2899 words)

  
 Pentagon hacker named   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
The world's best known security building, The Pentagon, had egg on its face last week when it turned out that the hacker that cracked its systems last month was just an 18-year-old teenager from Israel.
Ehud Tenebaum - nicknamed Analyser - was arrested by Israeli police and is suspected of hacking into more than 800 "secure" US government and other servers.
A self-styled computer freak, Tenebaum carried out what the US Department of Defence classed as "the most organised and systematic attack the Pentagon has seen to date".
www.pcw.co.uk /articles/print/2097433   (133 words)

  
 EXN.ca | Technology
Tenebaum, considered the leader of the ViRii group, is known by his "Analyzer" alias online.
And Tenebaum's lawyer, Amnon Zichroni, was quoted as saying "it appears to me (Tenebaum) brought benefit to the Pentagon.
Although Israeli police and Tenebaum's lawyer said there was no criminal intent in Tenebaum's hacking, other law enforcement officials took the ViRii break-ins more seriously.
www.exn.ca /Stories/1998/03/20/57.asp   (687 words)

  
 PCWorld.com - Pentagon Hacker Arrested in Israel
U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno said in a statement that the arrest of Tenebaum shows that the U.S. government%squots efforts to crack down on computer crime are on track.
Tenebaum, who comes from an upper-middle-class home, told Shimson he intended no harm to anyone.
One indication of how Tenebaum is being perceived by Israeli officials came from the country%squots prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu.
www.pcworld.com /news/article/0,aid,6247,00.asp   (500 words)

  
 #125: 03-18-98 - ISRAELI CITIZEN ARRESTED IN ISRAEL FOR HACKING UNITED STATES
The arrest of Tenebaum culminates several weeks of investigation into a series of computer intrusions into United States military systems that occurred in February 1998.
As part of this investigation, the Department of Justice formally requested legal assistance from the Israeli Ministry of Justice, and U.S. law enforcement agents traveled to Israel to present Israeli law enforcement officials with evidence of the magnitude and the source of the intrusions into United States computers.
Although the intrusions into United States military computers were treated as serious incidents, no classified information was ever compromised, and there is no indication that the attacks were part of a organized military or state-sponsored campaign against the United States.
www.globalsecurity.org /intell/library/news/1998/03/125_htm.html   (360 words)

  
 Pentagon Hacks
Suspects: Ehud Tenebaum (Analyzer, 20-yeras old) is the suspected ringleader and tutor of the others, and lives in Israel.
Three of the five are charged with destroying evidence.
Tenebaum claims that he and his proteges had access to more than 400 military computer systems.
www.iss.net /security_center/advice/News/Subjects/Pentagon_Hacks   (179 words)

  
 Solar Sunrise hacker joins Mid-East cyber-war | The Register
The ongoing war of packet floods and Web defacements between pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian hacktivists saw a new and famous name enter the fray last week: Ehud Tenebaum, the Israeli hacker known as "The Analyzer," who was fingered by the US government in 1998 as the mastermind of one of the biggest Pentagon hack-attacks in history.
Israeli police searched Tenebaum's home, and detained Tenebaum, in March, 1998, while investigating what then-US Deputy Defence Secretary John Hamre called "the most organized and systematic attack to date" on US military systems.
After a brief stint in the military, Tenebaum was indicted under Israeli computer crime laws in February 1999, and pleaded not guilty in September of that year.
www.theregister.co.uk /2000/11/21/solar_sunrise_hacker_joins_mideast   (649 words)

  
 Internet Security News: [ISN] Cracker Pal Turns on Analyzer   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Tenebaum's lawyer, Shmuel Tzang, said he was "not worried" by the
Tenebaum, who used the cracking alias Analyzer, was arrested in March 1998
Israeli authorities believe Tenebaum was the ringleader of the group.
www.landfield.com /isn/mail-archive/1999/May/0048.html   (370 words)

  
 FBI's Efforts Against Young Hackers Appear More Concentrated
Ehud Tenebaum in his father's car outside a police station near Tel Aviv on March 19.
Tenenbuam, who goes by the name Analyzer, is accused of having mentored a Northern California teen-age hacker, a high school sophomore whose name has not been made public and who goes by the moniker Makaveli.
With Tenebaum's help, Makaveli is accused of having hacked into hundreds of military, government and university systems, although most of the attacks are reported not to have breached classified material.
partners.nytimes.com /library/tech/98/03/cyber/articles/27hack.html   (1361 words)

  
 internet   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
He was found guilty of organising and operating attacks on the FBI, the US Air Force, the Department of Defence and the Massachusettes Institute of Technology.
Ehud Tenebaum, "the Analyser" was praised for his crime by the Israeli people.
A second sentencing gave Tenebaum 18 months in prison and a heftier fine.
scom.hud.ac.uk /scomrlo/cfp2117-02/c0255519/internet.htm   (439 words)

  
 SANS Intrusion Detection FAQ: What is Solar Sunrise?   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
In March 1998, the Analyzer was revealed to be Israeli citizen Ehud Tenebaum and he was arrested.3 A police investigation reportedly found sniffer ant Trojan programs in his possession.
In addition to the Northern California teens, Tenebaum had four 20 year old Israeli apprentices who were indicted along with him about one year after the well orchestrated assault on sensitive US systems.
Tenebaum claimed to have expected the plea bargain.3 All five of them were charged with conspiracy and harming computer systems; three of the five were charged with destroying evidence.
www.sans.org /resources/idfaq/solar_sunrise.php   (900 words)

  
 Pentagon hacker is 18-year old Israeli boy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
of the attack, turns out to be Ehud Tenebaum, an 18-year old computer freak from Israel.
Meanwhile, hacker gang The Enforcers is threatening a round of retaliatory attacks.
Tenebaum is under arrest after being picked up by the Israeli police, but as yet no charges have been filed.
www.pcw.co.uk /articles/print/2097273   (471 words)

  
 International Agreement Needed to Stop Hackers - Brief Article Insight on the News - Find Articles   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
The Pentagon suspected, before Tenebaum and his accomplices were identified, that Iraq had penetrated U.S. military computers and knew about our mobilization plans and the missions we planned against Iraqi targets.
This led to a major investigation, called "Solar Sunrise." Tenebaum and his two teen-age accomplices in California bragged on the Internet about their escapade, which resulted in their subsequent arrests.
Since attacks against U.S. computers can come from anywhere, and because there are few, if any, international agreements to cover these kinds of incidents (even extradition of hackers probably is impossible in most cases), there is a clear need for a remedy.
www.findarticles.com /p/articles/mi_m1571/is_12_16/ai_61487340/pg_2   (423 words)

  
 [No title]
Two weeks later, an 18-year-old Israeli youth named Ehud Tenebaum, believed to be "The Analyzer," was arrested on charges of infiltrating computers in Israel and the United States.
Shortly afterward, a hacker claiming to be "The Analyzer" left a message on the Internet encouraging authorities to focus their investigation on him, not the California teens.
But in an interview with an Israeli Internet magazine shortly before Tenebaum's arrest, an 18-year-old who identified himself as "The Analyzer" said he taught the teens his skills because he wanted to retire from hacking and "I felt it was a waste to let all my knowledge go."
www.cnn.com /SPECIALS/1998/year.review/sci_tech/04.hackers   (493 words)

  
 DOJ HAS HACKER ARRESTED IN ISRAEL - Computer Business Review   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
The US Department of Justice has revealed the identity of a hacker who is thought to be responsible for hundreds of attacks on US and Israeli state networks.
Ehud Tenebaum, an Israeli teenager has been named as the culprit following an extensive operation in the US involving around 30 FBI officers, the Department of Justice, the Air Force Office of Special Investigations, NASA, the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, and finally the Israeli Ministry of Justice.
Tenebaum has now been arrested by Israeli Police for illegally accessing computers owned by the Israeli and US Governments, as well as hundreds of commercial and educational institutions in the US.
cbronline.com /article_cg.asp?guid=87A3D86A-85FD-47E1-9583-266A24EDA08B   (332 words)

  
 disLEXia - Pentagon Hacker Wins Praise (Analyzer) (1998-03-19)
identified by the U.S. Justice Department as Ehud Tenebaum, was
Tenebaum, who lives in the well-to-do Israeli suburb of Hod
Tenebaum's high school principal described him as a high
md.hudora.de /blog/guids/92/01/2332304123882336.html   (284 words)

  
 Netanyahu lauds teen-age hacker who broke into Pentagon site   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
The suspect, who calls himself "The Analyzer," was identified by the U.S. Justice Department as Ehud Tenebaum.
When asked what he thought of Tenebaum, Netanyahu complimented the hacker's computer skills, but quickly added he was "very dangerous, too."
Israel's Channel Two Television said four FBI investigators came to Israel earlier this week and provided information that led to the arrest.
www.chron.com /content/chronicle/world/98/03/20/analyzer.2-0.html   (158 words)

  
 CS 485 - Computers In Society   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
Solar Sunrise, a series of attacks targeting Pentagon computers, leads to the establishment of round-the-clock, online guard duty at major military computer sites.
Ehud Tenebaum, an Israeli teen-ager known as "The Analyzer," is arrested in Israel.
Officials suspect him of working in concert with American teens to break into Pentagon computers.
www.iit.edu /~prokjos/hacking/1998.html   (121 words)

  
 Negation: The truth about AntiOnline   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-12)
It was just after the best co-ordinated attack ever on the Pentagon's computer system, with the perpetrators still at large.
Vranesvich's pager went off with the telephone n umber of the person everyone was looking for: on 4 March last year, he got the first interview with Ehud Tenebaum, nicknamed 'Analyser', who claimed to "own" 400 US Defense Department systems.
When he was charged with illegally accessing computer systems, the only place to read about the hacker's reactions was on Vranesvich's Internet magazine, AntiOnline.
attrition.org /negation/www/ao.027.html   (610 words)

  
 New Stuff
An Israeli teenager known as the "The Analyzer" managed to break into hundreds of computers owned by the Pentagon earlier this year.
Despite harsh words from the US Department of Justice, it is unlikely that Ehud Tenebaum will serve any jail time.
On the contrary-his notoriety has even garnered him a job endorsing an Israeli-made computer in a magazine ad.
www.nativecreative.com /elnradio/ws041898.html   (623 words)

  
 Wired, Hacker Jeopardy and Pics Request [Archive] - DEFCON Forums
They specifically reference Hacker Jeopardy,and would like to include a picture of Ehud Tenebaum, does anyone have any pictures of him, or know how to get in touch with him?
Also, does anyone have any pictures from Hacker Jeopardy at last year's conference?
there are a few shots of Ehud here (http://www.wbglinks.net/pages/watchmen/), depending on what type of picture they are looking for...
forum.defcon.org /archive/index.php/t-1729.html   (660 words)

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