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India-Pakistan
Yahoo terror techie wants to turn state's evidence
2008-10-26
NEW DELHI: In a new twist in the terror email case, IT professional from Pune, Mohammed Mansoor Asghar Peerbhoy who was arrested for sending terror emails prior to the Ahmedabad and Delhi serial blasts, is poised to turn approver, according to Times Now.

Rakesh Maria, Joint Commissioner Mumbai police confirmed that Mansoor Peerbhoy has filed an application in the MCOCA court indicating that he wants to turn an approver and help the police build a case against other accused.

Peerbhoy wrote an application in the MCOCA court on October 8 and submitted it only on October 21. The court has to decide on Peerbhoy's application.

Maria said, "Peerbhoy has filed an application in MCOCA court. He wrote the application on Oct 8, submitted it on Oct 21. His decision is pending in MCOCA court but this will help us considerably in exposing IM."

According to Times Now sources Mumbai police are happy that Peerbhoy is actively considering turning an approver because the terror techie, as he is called, is one of the nodal members of the conspiracy hatched by the Indian Mujahideen to carry blasts across the country.

31-year-old Mohammed Peerbhoy was working at an IT company belonging to the Yahoo group and was drawing a hefty pay packet of around 19 lakh rupees a year. He was considered a whiz in web server technology and used his knowledge to hack into unprotected wi-fi connections to send terror emails on behalf of the Indian Mujahideen (IM).
Posted by:john frum

#14  Did you write your code with fire-hardened sharpened sticks or knapped rocks, lotp?
Posted by: trailing wife   2008-10-26 23:48  

#13  > MAC addresses are hard coded on the NIC, and generally cannot be changed.

They were easy to change (at least 3com ones were back in 95 via dos). Certainly easy to do with the wifi ones. Or even in the OS.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2008-10-26 23:20  

#12  The MAC gets stripped at the first router hop when the packet is re framed and passed on.

I can has multipul countries? Pls Halp!
Posted by: .5MT   2008-10-26 23:10  

#11  For example, the various TCP/IP-related protocols usually mapped to the OSI application layer don't have the same abstraction and regularization impact that the Europeans anticipated / wanted when they pushed that model.

True enough. That still doesn't alter the fact that the functionality intended in the OSI 7 layers are implemented in 4 layers of the TCP/IP suite.

FWIW: I wrote the layer2 & layer3 & what then was the core of layer4 protocol handlers for one of the first commercially deployed OSI implementations in the US, before the TCP/IP definitions were firmed up for DOD.

Great. That and $5 will get you a cup of coffee at Starbucks. OSI isn't being used in the US at this time. The TCP/IP suite currently in use is defined in RFC1122, of course, each of the sub-components (protocols) have their own associated RFC's. And, have been revised and enhanced many times since your contribution.

RFC1122 is a four layer model. FWIW, I work with this stuff daily at a large data hosting center as the NetAdmin.

Posted by: Techie   2008-10-26 23:06  

#10  Kinda, sorta, techie.

For example, the various TCP/IP-related protocols usually mapped to the OSI application layer don't have the same abstraction and regularization impact that the Europeans anticipated / wanted when they pushed that model.

FWIW: I wrote the layer2 & layer3 & what then was the core of layer4 protocol handlers for one of the first commercially deployed OSI implementations in the US, before the TCP/IP definitions were firmed up for DOD.

Long time ago, when the SNA dinosaurs still roamed the earth and Big Iron was all the rage.
Posted by: lotp   2008-10-26 21:37  

#9  In reality real systems are more like RFCs.

In reality, TCP/IP implements all 7 layers of the OSI model in 4 layers. RFC's define the inner workings of the various component parts of the protocols that embody the TCP/IP suite.
Posted by: Techie   2008-10-26 21:06  

#8  Maybe he should have looked down the 7 layer model and changed his MAC address too.

MAC addresses are hard coded on the NIC, and generally cannot be changed. Besides, even in the rare instances it can be changed, it wouldn't make any difference. The MAC gets stripped at the first router hop when the packet is re framed and passed on.
Posted by: Techie   2008-10-26 21:02  

#7  I showed our local bank three different ways their "secure" online banking could be hacked, and they had conniptions. I'm just an amateur - think what a hacker-pro could do! Even with doing that, they STILL wanted me to sign up for online banking, the idiots.

Most systems can be hacked. This guy wasn't even attacking anything that was actually SECURE, or supposedly secure.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2008-10-26 13:35  

#6  So,... you're all nerds and/or geeks, aren't you? Not that there is anything wrong with that, of course...
Posted by: anonymous5089   2008-10-26 12:00  

#5  7 layer is ISO and BS.
In reality real systems are more like RFCs.
Posted by: 3dc   2008-10-26 11:17  

#4  Oh, sorry! The previous was off-topic, Fred, don't delete me......AAAHHH!!
Posted by: AlmostAnonymous5839   2008-10-26 11:16  

#3  I've worked with IT for the last 10 years and they've to teach me the 7 layer model and it don't make no sense to me.
Posted by: AlmostAnonymous5839   2008-10-26 11:15  

#2  He wasn't that good! He got caught.

Maybe he should have looked down the 7 layer model and changed his MAC address too.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2008-10-26 10:29  

#1  31-year-old Mohammed Peerbhoy was working at an IT company belonging to the Yahoo group and was drawing a hefty pay packet of around 19 lakh rupees a year. He was considered a whiz in web server technology and used his knowledge to hack into unprotected wi-fi connections to send terror emails on behalf of the Indian Mujahideen (IM)

When webmasters go bad. Film at 11.
Posted by: badanov    2008-10-26 10:25  

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