Section 19, subsection d., paragraph iii. of the indictment reads:
There were 801 listings under the category "Digital goods," ... For example, one listing, titled "HUGE hacking pack **150+ HACKING TOOLS & PROGRAMS**," described the item being sold as a "hacking pack loaded with keyloggers, RATs, banking trojans, and other various malware."
Ironically, the
The FBI "hires people who have hacking skill, and they purchase tools that are capable of doing these things," said a former official in the agency's cyber division.
Although the government is certainly free to use some techniques that private citizens cannot, these hacking exploits stand on shakey legal ground - and some have been found to be illegal.
The FBI has proposed using controversial hacking techniques including RATs, or Remote Access Terminals, which take control of a target's computer without them knowing, and spyware transmitted by email.
Devries point outs in her report that a Texas judge ruled against FBI software used to"extract files and covertly take photos using a computer's camera" because he was worried that "innocent people" might become targets for
Whatever the case, it should be obvious from Ulbricht's indictment and Devries' reporting that the modern FBI is treads on surveillance ground more frequently used by criminals.
It is even "loath" to use those tools on
As the FBI has recruited hackers to help implement these powerful techniques, it is not unlikely that the Bureau has employed some former customers of