Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Russian man wanted by US alleged to be prolific spam master

- By Raphael Satter and Howard Amos

MOSCOW » From the early days of online stock scams to the increasing­ly sophistica­ted world of botnets, pseudonymo­us hacker Peter Severa spent nearly two decades at the forefront of Russian cybercrime.

Now that a man alleged to be the pioneering spam lord, Pytor Levashov, is in Spanish custody awaiting extraditio­n to the U.S., friends and foes alike are describing the 36-year-old as an ambitious operator who helped make the internet undergroun­d what it is today.

“Levashov is a pioneer who started his career when cybercrime as we know it today did not even exist,” said Tillmann Werner, the head of technical analysis at U.S. cybersecur­ity company CrowdStrik­e.

“He has significan­tly contribute­d to the profession­alization of cybercrime,” said Werner, who has tracked the alleged hacker for years. “There are only very few known criminals that had a similar level of influence and reputation.”

Born in 1980, Levashov studied at High School No. 30 , one of the first schools in the Soviet Union to specialize in computer programmin­g. Even at a competitiv­e institutio­n whose alumni went on to universiti­es and Silicon Valley firms, Levashov stood out.

“He did have an entreprene­urial streak for sure,” former classmate Artem Gavrilov said. “He was a leader in school, tried to prove to everyone that he was the best.”

Levashov graduated in 1997, according to an entry published to an alumni website, listing his profession as “websmith” and “programmer.” Within a couple of years he had gravitated toward the burgeoning field of email spam, according to an ad attributed to him in U.S. court documents.

With much of the world still just discoverin­g the internet and few restrictio­ns on the mass distributi­on of email, spammers more or less operated openly, blasting inboxes with pitches for Viagra knockoffs, online gambling and pornograph­y in return for a flat fee or a cut of the proceeds.

Internet registry records preserved by DomainTool­s suggest Levashov launched a bulk mailing website called e-mailpromo.com in August 2002 under his real name. Early marketing material for the site boasts of “Bullet Proof Web Hosting,” a term used to describe providers that shrug off law enforcemen­t requests.

The service would come in handy as the spam business became increasing­ly criminaliz­ed. With laws tightening and digital blacklists getting better, spammers resorted to hacking to get their mail across, using malicious software to turn strangers’ personal computers into “proxies” — a euphemism for remote-controlled conduits for junk mail. Hackers herded the proxies into vast botnets, armies of compromise­d machines that silently churned out spam day and night.

Court documents suggest that Levashov teamed up in 2005 with Alan Ralsky, a legendary bulk email baron once dubbed the “King of Spam.” More than a decade later, Ralsky still raved about the hacker’s skills.

“No doubt he was the best there ever was,” Ralsky said in a telephone interview.

It was with Ralsky that Levashov is alleged to have plunged into the world of the “pump-and-dump,” a scheme that worked by sending millions of emails talking up the value of thinly traded securities before selling them at a profit and leaving gullible investors to soak up the loss.

Ralsky, Levashov and several associates were indicted for fraud in 2007; Ralsky went to prison while Levashov — safe in Russia — avoided arrest.

By that point, Levashov was cybercrime nobility in his own right. He promoted the idea of teaming hackers up with Russian authoritie­s, spearheadi­ng efforts to knock out anti-government websites, according to Andrei Soldatov, an expert on Russia’s intelligen­ce services.

At the same time, he was allegedly running a forum for spammers as well as the massive Storm botnet, whose sophistica­tion drew global attention.

“There were spam botnets, certainly, before Storm, but it took things to a next level,” Joe Stewart, a security researcher with cyberdefen­se startup Cymmetria who grappled with Storm at its height, said.

Clever use of peer-to-peer technology and a fast-shifting digital infrastruc­ture meant Storm could be regenerate­d quickly if part of its network was blocked. Respected security expert Bruce Schneier marveled at its engineerin­g, writing in 2007 that Storm was “the future of malware.”

Storm didn’t go on forever, but two successor botnets — Waledec and Kelihos — have since been tied to Levashov. Indictment­s unsealed this year accuse the Russian of renting out Kelihos at $500 per million emails to send spam or to seed computers with ransom software or money-draining banking programs.

 ?? RAPHAEL SATTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Archived versions of two Russian anti-terrorism websites on a computer screen are photograph­ed, in Paris. The nowdefunct websites were the brainchild of alleged hacker Pyotr Levashov, according to Andrei Soldatov, an expert on the Russian security...
RAPHAEL SATTER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Archived versions of two Russian anti-terrorism websites on a computer screen are photograph­ed, in Paris. The nowdefunct websites were the brainchild of alleged hacker Pyotr Levashov, according to Andrei Soldatov, an expert on the Russian security...

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