
DarkMarket
CyberThieves, CyberCops and You
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Narrated by:
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Misha Glenny
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By:
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Misha Glenny
About this listen
The benefits of living in a digital, globalised society are enormous; so too are the dangers. The world has become a law enforcer’s nightmare and every criminal’s dream. We bank online, shop online, date, learn, work and live online. But have the institutions that keep us safe on the streets learned to protect us in the burgeoning digital world? Have we become complacent about our personal security – sharing our thoughts, beliefs and the details of our daily lives with anyone who cares to relieve us of them?
In this fascinating and compelling book, Misha Glenny, author of the international best seller McMafia, explores the three fundamental threats facing us in the 21st century: cyber crime, cyber warfare and cyber industrial espionage. Governments and the private sector are losing billions of dollars each year, fighting an ever-morphing, often invisible, often super-smart new breed of criminal: the hacker.
Glenny has travelled and trawled the world. And by exploring the rise and fall of the criminal website, DarkMarket, he has uncovered the most vivid, alarming and illuminating stories. Whether JiLsi or Matrix, Iceman, Master Splynter or Lord Cyric; whether Detective Sergeant Chris Dawson in Scunthorpe or Agent Keith Mularski in Pittsburgh, Glenny has tracked down and interviewed all the players – the criminals, the geeks, the police, the security experts and the victims – and he places everyone and everything in a rich brew of politics, economics and history. The result is simply unputdownable.
DarkMarket is authoritative and completely engrossing. It’s a must-read for everyone who uses a computer: the essential crime book for our times.
©2011 Misha Glenny (P)2011 Penguin Audioa good in depth look into credit card skimming, the dark market and those who inhabited it. Well researched and kept my attention throughout.
enjoyable listen
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Long-winded but fascinating
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Blown away
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The book is an account of the fight by worldwide law enforcement agencies against this criminal underworld on the internet. The book describes a sinister domain that is deeply intertwined into the fabric of the global economy via the internet. The author reveals and profiles a network of individuals across the globe, from the US, Russia, Ukraine, Turkey and China to the UK. He delves into the personalities of these individuals in astonishing detail. Really very interesting character profiling here.
It is believed that some Governments have harnessed the energies of this criminal fraternity to target rival nations in Cold War style espionage. In the book, Glenny details the sequence of events which led to the attack on the Estonian Internet infrastructure in 2007. We learn too about Stuxnet a piece of malicious code devised to attack Industrial Control Systems. (The source of the Stuxnet code is said to be a Nation State and its primary target was likely the Iranian nuclear plant at Natanz in 2009.)
Its clear that Glenny is not an engineer or a hacker. Indeed if your looking for specific technical details there isnt a great deal here if you are a techie. However its very accessilbe and certainly the book is authoritative, based on detailed interviews with the characters described within. It’s aimed at anyone with even a basic knowledge of the internet and is a great read.
Great character profiling and extensive research.
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Don't be put off by the technical subject matter
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I admit to being disappointed that this is not quite the book I thought it was - the subtitle makes it sound as though it contains a wider discussion of cyber-crime and its importance in the world today whereas this limits itself to a specific aspect of a specific crime. That isn't a criticism of the book - only the subtitle.
I would warn that, if imperfectly rendered accents bother you, you might want to read the book. The Author is not a professional narrator and his renderings of some of his character's voices can grate.
A rollicking account of a giant conspiracy
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excellent insight into cyber crime
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great story, crazy that it's true
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And ... it’s quite detailed and focusses on the historic detail of the rise of certain cyber crime rings
Some of that is interesting and still of interest - but some just feels like a list of Russian names.
I gave up caring 2/3 of the way through ... it’s kind of academic ...
BUT if you’re interested in this type of thing his research and writing is excellent and his performance as good as it could be ... with spot on intonation and drama ... I just got a bit bored by the story
Good(ish)
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interesting and well described
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