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- LONDON (Mar 21, 1997 8:25 p.m. EST) - A masterspy believed by
- the Pentagon to be the No. 1 threat to U.S. security and
- deadlier than the KGB turned out to be a British schoolboy
- hacker working out of his bedroom.
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- U.S. military chiefs feared that an East European spy ring
- had gained access to their innermost intelligence secrets and
- hacked into American Air Defense systems.
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- But a 13-month investigation and a dramatic police raid on
- his London home revealed that 16-year-old music student Richard
- Pryce was the culprit.
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- Pryce, known on the internet as "The Datastream Cowboy," was
- fined $1,915 Friday by a London court after what his lawyer
- called "a schoolboy prank" reminiscent of the movie "War
- Games."
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- The U.S. Senate armed services committee was told the mystery
- hacker was the number one threat to U.S. security.
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- He was said to have downloaded dozens of secret files,
- including details of the research and development of ballistic
- missiles. Up to 200 security breaches were logged.
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- Using a $1,200 computer and modem, Pryce hacked into
- computers at Griffiss Air Base in New York and a network in
- California run by the missile and aircraft manufacturer
- Lockheed.
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- "Those places were a lot easier to get into than university
- computers in England," Pryce told reporters. "It was more of a
- challenge really, going somewhere
- I wasn't meant to. If you set out to go somewhere and you get
- there, other hackers would be impressed," he said.
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- His prank put Pryce on the front pages of most British
- newspapers Saturday with tales of "The Schoolboy masterspy" and
- "The Boy who cracked open the Pentagon."
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- Pryce, now 19, has been offered sizeable sums for the book
- and film rights to his story but his parents say he prefers to
- stick to his double bass and concentrate on winning a place in a
- leading London orchestra.
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- "Quite remarkably in a society dominated by sleaze, he has
- refused all the offers and wants to resume his quiet life," said
- his father, Nick Robertson.
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- His computer skills were not reflected in his exam results --
- he was only awarded a 'D' grade.
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