San Francisco Chronicle

Scary tech backlash — fake SWAT calls

Bay Area executives are often the targets

- By Sheera Frenkel

Over the first week of November, the police in San Francisco and New York responded to a series of telephone calls claiming that hostages were being held in the homes of Adam Mosseri, a senior Facebook executive.

The calls appeared to be coming from inside the homes. Officers arrived in force and barricaded the streets outside. Twice. But after tense, hourslong standoffs, they realized the calls were hoaxes. There were no hostages, and no one in the homes had called the police.

Mosseri is one of a number of tech executives who have been targeted recently in socalled swatting incidents. Swatting is online lingo used to describe when people call the police with false reports of a violent crime of some sort inside a home, hoping to persuade them to send a wellarmed SWAT team.

These episodes have become more common in communitie­s rich with tech companies and their billionair­e executives, like the Bay Area and Seattle, according to six police department­s contacted by the New York Times.

Exact numbers are unclear, the police say, because

there is no central repository of informatio­n for these sorts of attacks. But as online discourse has become more combative and more personal, some in the industry aren’t surprised that tech executives — the people who decide what is posted on social media and who is barred from it — have become regular targets.

Swattings have spiked at Facebook in particular, according to local police department­s and security officials at the Menlo Park company, which in recent years has cracked down on false accounts, threatenin­g language and other types of content that violates its rules. They spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y surroundin­g the attacks.

Mosseri declined to comment, and a Facebook spokesman, Anthony Harrison, said in a statement that “because these things deal with security matters and our employees, we are unable to comment.”

“Like any other type of crime, when the cost is zero and the deterrent is very low, you’ve created a perfect opportunit­y for people to pour time and resources into that crime,” said Brian Krebs, a swatting victim who writes a widely read blog, Krebs on Security.

The attacks have been aided by forums that have sprung up both on the public internet and on the camouflage­d sites of the dark web. These forums name thousands of people, from highrankin­g executives to their extended families, who could be targets, providing cell phone numbers, home addresses and other informatio­n. Some even discuss techniques that can be used — like cheap, online technology that can spoof a phone number and make the police believe a 911 call is coming from a target’s home.

In the eight months since one online forum was started, nearly 3,000 people have joined.

“Who should we do next?” read one message on the forum last month. The responses included gun emojis — the symbol, in swatting forums, for an attack in which the police were successful­ly called to the target’s home. Many of the responses were laced with profanity, as well as suggestion­s for exgirlfrie­nds who should be swatted.

One forum names at least two dozen Facebook employees as potential targets. They range from executives to product engineers. Some forum participan­ts said that they had been barred from Facebook or Instagram, and that Facebook employees were fair game because they “think they are god.”

Swatting started in the combative world of online gaming. It was a way to terrorize someone more famous, get even with a rival or retaliate against someone with different political views.

Provoking a heavily armed police response presents obvious risks. Last year, a 26yearold California man was sentenced to 20 years in federal prison for calling in dozens of fake emergency calls, including one that led to the fatal police shooting of a Kansas resident, Andrew Finch.

Because few people carrying out swattings are ever caught, the police and tech companies can only guess at their motivation­s. They have seen, however, a correlatio­n between removals of large numbers of accounts for threatenin­g behavior or hate speech and what they believe to be retaliator­y attacks against the executives responsibl­e.

As more police department­s recognize the threat, some have already found practical solutions. In Seattle, people who believe they are at risk of being swatted can include their informatio­n and that of their families on a police registry. When an emergency call about a potential threat comes in, the police check to make sure the home isn’t in the registry. If it is, they call the home first to see if they can reach someone inside, and check with neighbors to see if there are any corroborat­ing reports of shots fired or other disturbanc­es.

“The registry is a voluntary thing we created, and it is a small but effective step for people who know they are at risk of being targeted,” said Carmen Best, the police chief of Seattle. “Swatting is not a new thing. It’s been around for a long time, and it weaponizes our 911 system. It’s a lot more than a hoax or a prank.”

Seattle’s approach is unusual. None of the other police department­s contacted by the Times had a similar registry, or had even heard of the idea, despite the recent swattings against tech executives in their jurisdicti­ons.

Because swattings are largely organized online, the people behind them can live anywhere in the world. And despite numerous attempts to create federal legislatio­n banning the practice, there is no specific statute that allows swatting to be investigat­ed and prosecuted as a federal crime.

Facebook, Google and Twitter did not respond to requests for comment on measures they have taken to protect their employees from swatting. In recent months, all three companies have held discussion­s with employees who they believe are at risk.

They have asked those employees to take added precaution­s, such as not publicly giving their whereabout­s or listing informatio­n about their families. The tech companies have also privately let the local police know when certain highprofil­e executives are at risk, according to police department­s around Silicon Valley.

The home of Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg was permanentl­y flagged as high risk, said one Facebook security expert, who asked not to be named because of the sensitivit­y of the topic.

Facebook, Google and Twitter informally share informatio­n about potential swattings, giving warnings to one another if they spot a threat, the expert said.

In an attack on another Facebook executive last year, police officers encircled the man’s home in Palo Alto, after being told that he was at risk of harming himself and his family. The episode was resolved without anyone getting hurt.

Facebook had flagged the executive as a likely target for swatting and had taken precaution­s to protect him and his family. The police still sent a SWAT team.

“Anyone can be at risk of being swatted, but people who work in tech are at a particular risk,” Best said. “We have to get a foothold on this, before more people get hurt.”

 ?? Sarah Mazzetti / New York Times ??
Sarah Mazzetti / New York Times
 ?? Ricky Rhodes / New York Times 2019 ?? Adam Mosseri, head of Instagram, is among the tech executives who have been targeted.
Ricky Rhodes / New York Times 2019 Adam Mosseri, head of Instagram, is among the tech executives who have been targeted.

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