Former Amazon employee convicted in Capital One hack

Former Amazon employee convicted in Capital One hack


Signage is displayed on the exterior of a Capital One Financial Corp. cafe branch in Walnut Creek, California, U.S., on Tuesday, July 18, 2017.

Bloomberg | Getty Images

A former Amazon Web Services employee was convicted of hacking into Capital One and stealing the data of more than 100 million people nearly three years ago in one of the largest data breaches in the United States.

Paige Thompson, who worked for the software giant as an engineer until 2016, was found guilty on Friday of seven federal crimes, including wire fraud, which carries up to 20 years in prison. The other charges, illegally accessing a protected computer and damaging a protected computer, are punishable by up to five years in prison. A jury found Thompson not guilty of aggravated identity theft and access device fraud after 10 hours of deliberations, a release said.

Prosecutors argued that Thompson, who worked under the name “erratic,” created a tool to search for misconfigured accounts on AWS. That allowed her to hack into accounts from more than 30 Amazon clients, including Capital One, and mine that data. Prosecutors argued Thompson also used her access to some of the servers to mine cryptocurrency that went to her own wallet.

“She wanted data, she wanted money, and she wanted to brag,” Assistant United States Attorney Andrew Friedman said of Thompson in closing arguments during the week-long trial. 

Capital One in December agreed to pay $190 million to settle a class-action lawsuit over the breach, in addition to an earlier agreement to pay $80 million in regulatory fines. The data stolen included about 120,000 social security numbers and roughly 77,000 bank account numbers, according to the complaint.

An attorney representing Thompson did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

U.S. District Judge Robert S. Lasnik set Thompson’s sentencing for Sept. 15.

Subscribe to CNBC on YouTube.



Source

Oracle stock jumps 7% as cloud provider joins investor group to run TikTok’s U.S. business
Technology

Oracle stock jumps 7% as cloud provider joins investor group to run TikTok’s U.S. business

Oracle‘s stock jumped 7% Friday after the cloud provider joined a group of investors slated to lead TikTok’s U.S. operations. In a memo to employees Thursday, CEO Shou Zi Chew said the social media company’s U.S. division will be run by a joint venture that includes Oracle, Silver Lake, and Abu Dhabi-based MGX. The deal […]

Read More
Palo Alto Networks announces multibillion-dollar deal with Google Cloud
Technology

Palo Alto Networks announces multibillion-dollar deal with Google Cloud

Palo Alto Networks will migrate key internal workloads to Google Cloud as part of a new multibillion-dollar agreement, the companies announced on Friday. The companies said the deal is an expansion of their existing strategic partnership and will deepen their engineering collaboration. Palo Alto Networks is now using Google’s Gemini artificial intelligence models to power […]

Read More
Inside Intel’s new Arizona fab, where the chipmaker’s fate hangs in the balance
Technology

Inside Intel’s new Arizona fab, where the chipmaker’s fate hangs in the balance

Intel was once the world’s largest semiconductor company, but its market cap plummeted in recent years as the chipmaker fell behind Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. and spent billions of dollars trying to catch up. Now, Intel has entered high-volume production of 18A, the new chip node it says will turn things around. The biggest problem? […]

Read More