April 8, 2008 4:00 AM PDT

Meet the Echo Boom hackers

On Thursday morning, at this year's RSA Conference in San Francisco, Chris Boyd of Facetime and I will present a talk, "How to Adapt to the Echo Generation's Social Media Hacking Game." The following is a preview of that talk, presented in three parts. On Tuesday, we're looking at who are the Echo Generation hackers. Wednesday , we'll look at how they use online social media for hacks. And on Thursday, we'll talk about how Chris uses features of social networks and Web 2.0 to shut these kids down.

It's a world of fake hacks and stolen Habbo Hotel and World of Warcraft gaming accounts. Sometimes there's money associated with it, but most often the scams and the pranks are just for prestige.

Welcome to the next generation of computer hackers, the teenybopper edition, where the kids, ages 11 to 16, don't consider YouTube, MySpace.com, Facebook, and Xanga to be social-networking sites. They call them "social engineering sites."

They're the geek subset of the so-called Echo Boomers, a generation defined as children born between 1982 and 1995; they are also sometimes called "Generation Y" or "Millennials." The Echo Boomer name is a direct reference to the Baby Boomers, born some 30 years before, and many in fact children of Baby Boomers. According to CBS News, Echo Boomers already spend $170 billion a year of their own and their parents' money, so from a marketing perspective they're significant.

They're the first generation to experience the growth of the Internet at a very early age. Some are early adopters of cutting-edge Web 2.0 applications and services such as video streaming and social networking. Some of these kids have begun to dabble in computer hacking, but unlike previous generations of computer hackers, it's not about discovery, it's all about them.

Neo hackers
According to Chris Boyd, director of malware research at Facetime Security Labs, Echo Boomer computer hackers "don't seem to be as wise to the risks as older generations were." They leap from social-networking site to social-networking site. And they are quite happy to post photographs of themselves on sites selling stolen credit cards. They're non-anonymous on the Internet, he says, often keeping the same username, which makes them easy to shut down.

But keeping one username in particular is behavior that is not necessarily true of all mainstream teenage users, suggests Danah Boyd (no relation to Chris Boyd). As a Ph.D. candidate at the University of California at Berkeley and a fellow at Harvard Law School's Berkman Center for Internet and Society, her graduate work has focused on how people manage their presentation of self in online environments. Her subsequent research has found anecdotal evidence of teenagers who create a throw-away e-mail account for the sole purpose of creating a new social site page. Then, over time, if they lose their password to the site or to the e-mail account, they simply create a new account and a new profile page.

Where the teens are
In January 2007, the Pew Internet & American Life Project released a study of 935 mainstream U.S.-based youth aged 12 to 17 years old. Overall, 41 percent of the youths aged 12 to 13 had social site profiles, while 61 percent of the youths aged 14 to 17 did. But by gender, the differences are clear. Seventy percent of girls aged 15 to 17 have a social site profile compared with only 50 percent for boys the same age.

In the study, the mainstream teens said the social network they updated most was MySpace (85 percent), with Facebook (7 percent) and Xanga (1 percent) far behind. A quarter of the teens surveyed said they visited their site once a day, with another 20 percent saying they visited more often. Another 20 percent said they visit once every two weeks. Not surprisingly, use of the social-network site changed with computer access. Youths who accessed the Internet at home accessed social sites more often--58 percent as opposed to 42 percent who accessed the Internet from school or some other public terminal.

The importance of these social-network profile sites in the lives of mainstream Echo Boomers varied among those surveyed. Ninety percent said they use the sites to stay in touch with friends they see often, and 82 percent said they stay in touch with those they do not see as often. A majority use the sites for making social plans. But when it comes to making new friends, the teens were evenly split. And as for flirting, 83 percent (male and female) said they did not do that. Sixty percent of the youths surveyed reported limiting access to their site profiles.

Why they're online
In one paper, Danah Boyd likens online social networks to radio and mass media in past generations, except that social networks allow interaction as opposed to being fed information from the mass media. Echo Boomers may be the first generation to interactively define who they are. She adds, "this is highly beneficial for marginalized youth, but its effect on mainstream youth is unknown."

"Because the digital world requires people to write themselves into being," she writes, "profiles provide an opportunity to craft the intended expression through language, imagery and media. Explicit reactions to their online presence offers valuable feedback. The goal is to look cool and receive peer validation."

She added, "for those seeking attention, writing comments and being visible on popular people's pages is very important and this can be a motivation to comment on others' profiles."

Same name
This is consistent with Chris Boyd's research into Echo Boomer hackers that create one username and see how it plays on the social networks. "This is more of a lifestyle statement to a lot of these kids. A lot of it is about fame and fortune," he said.

Teenage hackers are using YouTube.

(Credit: FaceTime Security Labs)

He said in his research that he sees kids starting between the ages of 11 and 13 on online gaming sites. "A lot of these kids mature on to Habbo Hotel,.Runescape, and things like that. From there they start to learn about the basic hacks and cracks and patches." Some start to run their own forums. That's when, he said, they start to get a bit more adventurous; then they start looking into the phish pages, the fake account stealer programs that you get for Runescape. He said there's a strong link between gaming communities and teenage computer hacking although he doesn't know if anyone's ever actually set down some hard statistics.

One example
He cites an example of a kid on a forum who posted that his YouTube account had been shut down. The kid wanted others on the forum to launch a campaign to get his username reinstated. "Rather than recreate the username with a one or a two on the end," Boyd said, "he was so obsessed with his own particular username, with the uniqueness of it and all that, that, in his own words, he'd rather retire from the hacking scene than lose his username."

Additional research suggests that teens of a certain age have "settled," and are therefore much more protective of their nascent identities online. They're individuating from their parents; they're trying a version of themselves out in the real world, so their usernames take on additional value and weight. So when they cross the line into criminal hacking, in many ways it is just as personal as though they themselves were engaged in petty crime on the streets. And that is an important intersection for teenagers who dabble in writing malicious software.

Gotcha
By keeping the same username across Xanga, Facebook, and MySpace, Chris Boyd expects to find a paper trail online. And he does. He has tracked many offenders across numerous sites, some going back a few years, and done so in about 10 minutes or less using Google. "It's weird," he says. "Now when you hear about hackers it's all profit motivated--they're not doing it for hacking kudos anymore; they're not in it for the fame; they're in it for the money. There was a time when (hacking) was all about exploration, being notorious or well-known or a famous hacker. It's almost that a lot of these kids have reverted back to that way of thinking."

Except they don't see any reason to hide.

Boyd goes on to say a lot of what he's seen online is like an American Idol sort of hacker fame. Rather than having any sort of real standing of fame within the hacking community, a lot of the hacks are quite facile--a lot are fleeting. "It's because they haven't got a concept of the consequences of it all. It's almost like a fad--and it's a pretty dangerous fad, I think."

On Wednesday, we'll look at exactly what these Echo Boomer hackers are doing online.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 11 comments
Same As It Ever Was
by Len Bullard April 8, 2008 6:24 AM PDT
There is little new about adolescents creating and recreating their own identities. That is what adolescence is. That they do it online is a bigger version of them doing it onstage. Once called the 'tweeners' now they are the 'echo boomers' and so DB and her 'must find an idea to justify the PhD' generation do as others such as Marc Andreesen do, slag on the baby boomers while still trying to find a single accomplishment to distinguish themselves from the most inventive generation of all time.

They are not deep thinkers but in the era of disposing of celebrity faster and faster, it's sort of fun to watch these aging webheads desperately try to get the spotlight back on them.

Fame is an addiction and possibly dangerous, but not as dangerous as the cravings of the ones who's time has come and gone. Perhaps it is the one undeniable fact for the Internet kids: the web speeds up the process but it in no significant way alters the process itself.

Same as it ever was.
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Paperghost
by n3td3v April 8, 2008 10:55 AM PDT
Keep up the good work paperghost, you have my support mate.

He has a good blog, its very informative, with humour mixed in too.

Paperghost aka Chris Boyd
http://www.vitalsecurity.org/
Reply to this comment
RE:
by speshul April 8, 2008 3:12 PM PDT
haha N3tD3v your name fits this topic of discussion oh so well.

The reason so many of the so called "Echo Boomers" is for pure profit and reps just like you said.

Being one of those in the past I sorta have insight in a way I like to think.

Instead of breaking into people's house and cars, you in through the digital backdoor. Using socks 5 prox or something along those lines. Phishing, trojans, whatever you know best and think you can use

Personally I never stole anyones personal info. but it was mainly about the fact that I COULD do it. Pushing my limits on the internet securely in a way but waving it in the publics face sorta defiantly saying, "What are you really gonna do about it?"

It's an easy way for kids too young to work to make money without even having to work. School, work, normal day activities just don't excite the mind like phishing an account or getting someone to install the trojan or whatever unkowingly and having that power over their life so to speak.

It's like the movie "Hackers". It's "Fun" to do it. It makes no sense but really, does anything this generation does make sense any more? There's no rhyme or reason. Like the nike commercial says, "Just Do It". That's the mentality of our minds any more. Sad to say unfortunately.

As we grow up and see the error and stupidity of our ways we will change, but this way of doing things surely won't. We need to step our game up on catching these kids and put a stop to it before it gets really out of hand, as if it isn't already.

It's easy and fun. So why would they stop to think about the consequences?
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Re: Same as it ever was
by speshul April 8, 2008 4:32 PM PDT
SO TRUE!

Unfortunately having to be grouped with this generation of degenerates SUCKS!

All they talk about is gossip, celebrities, what they watched on tv, and their myspace.

It's sickening. Our generation will have no real distinguished thing about it. Besides the fact that we're run by entertainment and the internet.

We're not by any means original. Which really is irritating. We've become acustomed to reality T.V. and drama. No longer are they soap operas like Grandma used to watch. We call em drama shows. It's just maddening

I could go on and on. About the fact that we eat up the B.S. on commercials and what the tv tells us we should dress like, act like, watch, eat, and think like. We are robots and slaves to the boxes of electronics of this world

It's just plain insane :)
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Remember
by gary sayre April 9, 2008 3:02 PM PDT
There once was a generation of Phone Hackers.
They grew up. Is this new generation any different from the past generations? How dangerous are they and what kind of nerd would make a "Study" that contains just a hint of validity! What some youngsters tell you on the phone, or the internet is just exactly what they want to pass on. Most of it is just bull and child like attempts to garner attention. This so called "Social" study is so full of holes a blind person could see through it!! Im sorry, a cave man could do it!!!
Reply to this comment
Echo boomers
by krosavcheg April 9, 2008 7:33 PM PDT
Seriously guys, what is up with yet creating another label for this generation? Isn't 2 enough? and you see the need to add a 3rd one? Gimme a freaking break, sheesh.
Reply to this comment
by Zero187 May 27, 2008 9:40 AM PDT
Yeah CC's are too easy to get these days. You can go on google, search for #ccpower, join an irc channel and get credit cards within minutes without even needing to know any exploits because people just give them out. We need to make a new validation system for the credit cards, for example one where the CC owner goes to their bank site and registers their IP address with the credit card so only purchases can be made from that IP. It really wouldn't make any sense purchasing stuff from another computer anyways because you dont know what that other person has installed (keyloggers, trojans, etc..)
Reply to this comment
by smith50001 August 12, 2008 2:17 AM PDT
I NEED A REAL HACKERS THAT HAVE CCV AND DO TF , AM REALLY READY FOR A DEAL ADD ME AND LETS DEAL smith4uk@yahoo.com
Reply to this comment
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