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By Martin Fiutak
Posted on ZDNet News: Sep 8, 2004 4:59:00 PM

German police said on Saturday that a 19-year-old from Helmstedt, Lower Saxony, has admitted to hijacking the domain of the eBay Germany Web site and is likely to face charges of computer sabotage.

The domain hijack attack happened at the end of August when visitors to the eBay.de site were redirected to a different domain name server (DNS), meaning that they could not access auctions.

According to Frank Federau, a spokesman for the Lower Saxony police, the 19-year-old is not a computer expert. The boy claims to have merely stumbled across Web sites that described how to do a DNS transfer.

He claimed that "just for fun" he requested a DNS transfer for several sites including Google.de, Web.de, Amazon.de and eBay.de. Most of these transfers were denied, but the transfer for eBay went ahead. It is unclear how the domain could have been transferred without the consent of the owner.

The teenager said he did not want to cause damage. Indeed, according to Federau, he was shocked when he was told that he had become the new owner of the eBay.de Web address. The domain has now been returned to its rightful owner.

eBay said that user data was not endangered by the domain hijacking.

Maike Fuest, a spokeswoman for eBay, said on Tuesday that the company is not taking any action until it has investigated the incident.

"We want to carefully check all the facts, before we do anything," said Fuest.

The teenager is likely to face charges of spying on data and computer sabotage, Federau said.

In May this year, another teenager from Lower Saxony was arrested on suspicion of creating the Sasser computer worm that infected millions of computers worldwide. The case against the Sasser suspect is due to start soon.

The full news report (in German) on the eBay domain hijacking can be found here.

ZDNet Germany's Martin Fiutak reported from Munich. Ingrid Marson of ZDNet UK contributed to this report.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 20 Talkback(s)
he made a legal request and it was fulfilled
it should of been denied, someone missed up, if I call you phone company and cancel you phone, who whould you be upset more, me or the phone company

If I gave them my correct name and they canceled your service - they are in trouble, not me... (Read the rest)
Posted by: V Sanders Posted on: 09/09/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Book em up Danno  seadog59 | 09/08/04
It depends.  Letophoro | 09/08/04
The REGISTRAR should face the charges!  kd5auq | 09/08/04
Maybe we should blame microsoft for this?  tamuhockey | 09/08/04
how is  eLurker | 09/08/04
examples  tamuhockey | 09/08/04
Possibilities  AbsolutelyNot | 09/08/04
Probably not.  Letophoro | 09/08/04
i disagree  eLurker | 09/08/04
you know  eLurker | 09/08/04
How it got through  AbsolutelyNot | 09/08/04
I got a rope, find a good tree.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 09/08/04
NRA supporters  cvos | 09/08/04
what in the heck  eLurker | 09/08/04
as you yourself  eLurker | 09/08/04
Sorry, but if your looking for sympathy,,,  No_Ax_to_Grind | 09/08/04
Even if it was legal  voska | 09/09/04
Nah, someone at eBay needs to be punished  balsover | 09/09/04
Depends  voska | 09/09/04
he made a legal request and it was fulfilled  V Sanders | 09/09/04

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