City
Epaper

Ex-AWS engineer convicted of hacking data of 100 mn customers

By IANS | Updated: June 19, 2022 11:25 IST

San Francisco, June 19 A former female engineer of Amazon Web Services (AWS), the Cloud arm of commerce ...

Open in App

San Francisco, June 19 A former female engineer of Amazon Web Services (AWS), the Cloud arm of commerce giant Amazon, has been found guilty of hacking into more than 100 million customers' cloud storage systems and stealing data linked to the 2019 Capital One breach.

Paige Thompson, 36-year-old former tech worker, was convicted in the US District Court in Seattle of seven federal crimes connected to her scheme to hack into cloud computer data storage accounts and steal data and computer power for her own benefit.

She was arrested in July 2019 after Capital One alerted the FBI to Thompson's hacking activity.

Thompson is scheduled for sentencing by US District Judge Robert S. Lasnik on September 15, the US Department of Justice said in a statement.

"Thompson used her hacking skills to steal the personal information of more than 100 million people, and hijacked computer servers to mine cryptocurrency," said US Attorney Nick Brown.

"Far from being an ethical hacker trying to help companies with their computer security, she exploited mistakes to steal valuable data and sought to enrich herself," Brown added.

Thompson was found guilty of wire fraud, five counts of unauthorised access to a protected computer and damaging a protected computer. The jury found her not guilty of access device fraud and aggravated identity theft.

"She wanted data, she wanted money, and she wanted to brag," Assistant US Attorney Andrew Friedman said.

The intrusion to Capital One accounts impacted more than 100 million US customers. The company was fined $80 million and settled customer lawsuits for $190 million.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Paige thompsonNick brownamazonSan FranciscoAmazon Web ServicesSeattleSan francisco bayVirtual customer serviceJose d'saIot servicesCustomer technical serviceAmazon web services, inc.
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalSan Francisco Earthquake: 4.3 Magnitude Tremor Jolts Bay Area at 3 AM, No Tsunami Threat

EntertainmentAmazon Music India unveils ‘Track by Track’With Karan Aujla’s new album P-POP CULTURE

NationalAir India to Suspend Direct Delhi–Washington Services from September 1, Offers Alternate Routes

MumbaiCockroaches Spotted on Air India Flight from San Francisco to Mumbai; Plane Cleaned in Kolkata

NationalAir India Flight From San Francisco to Mumbai Suffers Technical Snag; Passengers Deplaned at Kolkata Airport (Watch Videos)

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologyRBI sticks to status quo on repo rate, stays with neutral stance

TechnologySensex, Nifty open in green ahead of RBI repo rate decision

TechnologyUPI transactions see 31 pc growth at 19.63 billion in September: NPCI data

TechnologySouth Korean firms' spending on US lobbying doubles in 5 years: Data

TechnologyGoogle Korea pays $12.2 million in corporate taxes in 2024: Lawmaker