×
  • remind me tomorrow
  • remind me next week
  • never remind me
Subscribe to the ANN Newsletter • Wake up every Sunday to a curated list of ANN's most interesting posts of the week. read more

News
30-Year-Old Man Implicated for 'Remote Control Virus'

posted on by Egan Loo
Warrant filed over malware that led to Gundam 00 technical director's mistaken arrest

Police filed an arrest warrant for a 30-year-old Tokyo man over a malicious software (malware) that allows an attacker to remotely control a victim's computer. The investigators intend to arrest the suspect on Sunday.

Police had released him one month later after they determined that the malware likely enabled someone else to send the threats from Kitamura's computer. Three other men held on similar charges were also released, and the government publicly apologized to all four for arresting them.

Since last year, news organizations have received multiple email messages from the alleged "real criminal" behind the malware. By following the instructions in a January 5 message, a microSD memory card with the malware was discovered on the collar of a cat in Kanagawa Prefecture's Enoshima island. The police then examined the footage from a security camera near the cat's location and found footage of a man acting suspiciously near the cat. With the footage, the authorities identified the 30-year-old suspect as the one who allegedly left the memory card.

The alleged "real criminal" Puella Magi Madoka Magica Nendoroid figure of Madoka Kaname, surrounded by an apparent noose fashioned from an Ethernet cable.

News organizations received another message from the alleged "real criminal" on New Year's Day. This message introduced a "new game" for revealing more information about the alleged suspect. The message linked to several files, and claimed that the first person to "solve the five puzzle problems" in the files will receive the malware's source code.

One of the files contained an illustration of the Korean Tales of Eternia. Tonchamon has a speech balloon with Korean Hangul characters, while Meredy has a speech balloon with "Happy New Year" written in Melnics, the fictional language in Tales of Eternia.

The malware is still IPA) as a "virus." However, the IPA said that the malware was distributed by fooling s into thinking they were ing a "character substitution software," similar to malware known as "Trojan horses."

Source: NHK via Itai News


This article has a follow-up: 'Remote Control PC Virus' Suspect Denies Charges (2013-02-11 21:15)
discuss this in the forum (20 posts) |
bookmark/share with: short url

this article has been modified since it was originally posted; see change history

archives