Trojan horse
The Trojan was spread via the controversial Winny file-sharing system in Japan

Man admits to unleashing anime Trojan

24 year-old the first virus writer to be arrested in Japan

Written by Robert Jaques

Nakatsuji is being charged with copyright infringement rather than for creating malware

Graham Cluley Senior technology consultant, Sophos

A Japanese man has admitted in court to writing a data-destroying Trojan horse.

Masato Nakatsuji, a 24 year-old who in January became the first ever virus writer to be arrested in Japan, admitted in Kyoto District Court that he created a Trojan and used popular copyrighted animation footage to spread it via the internet.

The malware was designed ultimately to wipe music and movie files from users' computers.

The malicious code, believed to be the Pirlames Trojan, was spread via the controversial Winny file-sharing system in Japan in 2007.

Nakatsuji made the admission during the first day of the trial, where he answered charges of copyright infringement and defaming an acquaintance by embedding his photograph into the malicious code.

"Al Capone was charged with tax evasion rather than racketeering, and Nakatsuji is being charged with copyright infringement rather than for creating malware," said Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant for Sophos.

"If he is found guilty, the general public are unlikely to worry that it was his ill-advised choice of graphics which got him into legal trouble rather than virus writing.
"However, a clear message needs to be sent to the computer underground that they will not be shown a blind eye if they spread malicious code and damage innocent people's computers and data."

Prosecutors described how Nakatsuji is alleged to have created the Trojan horse, attached it to copyrighted animated pictures and planted links to it on internet message forums.

However, Nakatsuji's defence has argued that the malware was not seriously malignant, and that justice would not be served by punishing the graduate student for spreading the Trojan when there were no specific laws against doing so.

Isamu Kaneko, the author of the Winny file-sharing program, was fined by a Japanese court in December 2006 for assisting in copyright violation.

Further reading

Cybercrooks step up taxing attacks

Spammers use bogus downloads to spread malware   More...

Adware tops February malware chart

Kaspersky warns of Virtumonde Trojan downloaders   More...

Ransomware attacks target Symbian mobiles

Pay up, or you'll never see your text messages again   More...

Hybrid Trojan/worm attacks turn nasty

New worms acting in Trojan-like ways   More...

Related articles

FBI tracked 'teen bomber' using spyware

Anonymous MySpace user infected with 'locator program'   More...

Japanese cop puts police records on P2P network

Let's be careful out there   More...

Taiwan group guilty of 90 per cent of Microsoft piracy

Distributor jailed after three-year court case   More...

Major Canadian hacker ring cracked

The Mounties always get their man   More...

Do you agree?

Advertisement

Job of the week

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Hiring now on ComputingCareers:

Related IT jobs

Search thousands of IT jobs :

Search thousands of IT jobs:

Advanced search

Advertisement

Watch

16 May 2008

2.97 MBXP on OLPC, broken dreams and Yahoo fights back More...

15 May 2008

3.28 MBDark fibre, mobile TV and solar power More...

14 May 2008

2.66 MBOnline inequality, mobile thumbprints and corporate raids More...

Poll

HOME WORKING

HOME WORKING

Do you let any or all of your employees work from home?

Previous poll results

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Enter email address to edit your newsletter preferences

Spotlight

OLPC

OLPC to ship with Windows XP

Microsoft teams up with One Laptop per Child project   More...

The Sims

The Sims goes flat-pack with Ikea

Virtual world gets Swedish wood   More...

Advertisement

Microsoft-Yahoo

Yahoo board fights back at Icahn

Investor accused of 'significant misunderstanding' in Microsoft saga   More...

MySpace

Woman charged over MySpace suicide

Lori Drew indicted on federal charges   More...

Advertisement