Washington Post Caught in Metadata Gaffe?

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Eagle-eyed Slashdot posters discovered, the online images by photographer Sarah L. Voisin contained tags about the location of the shoot.

The Washington Post's online arm has apparently been caught in a metadata gaffe that exposed the whereabouts of a 21-year-old hacker who confessed to controlling thousands of compromised PCs for malicious use.

The hacker agreed be interviewed by Washington Post reporter Brian Krebs on the condition that he not be identified by name or home town, but when the article was posted on the newspaper's Web site, an accompanying photograph included metadata that pinpointed the location to Roland, Okla., a small town with a population of 2,842.

In the feature story titled Invasion of the Computer Snatchers, the hacker known online as "0x80" (pronounced X-eighty) openly boasted about breaking into thousands of computers around the globe and infecting them with malware that turned them into botnet drones.

A botnet is a collection of compromised machines controlled remotely via IRC (Internet Relay Chat) channels to send spam or launch denial-of-service attacks.

In 0x80's case, the hacker openly admitted to illegally installing adware and spyware on infected computers and earning money from online marketing companies that pay for advertisements delivered to users.

However, because of the metadata slip-up by the Washington Post, it is very likely that law enforcement authorities will be looking in the direction of Roland, OK to find the hacker, who was described in the story as "tall and lanky, with hair that falls down to his eyebrows," and speaking with a "heavy Southern drawl and Midwestern nasality."


The reporter also wrote that 0x80 lives with his religious parents in a small town in Middle America where the nearest businesses are a used-car lot, a gas station and convenience store and a strip club, where 0x80 claimed he recently dropped $800 for an hour alone in a VIP room with several dancers.

"His bedroom resembles a miniature mission control center, with computers, television and computer monitors, and what must be several miles' worth of tangled wires plugged into an array of surge-protected power strips," Krebs wrote.


The article was published with several photographs, including one with a doctored image of half of the hacker's face.
 
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