USA TODAY US Edition

Hackers turned cyber sleuths lead Romania’s tech industry

Opportunit­ies other than crime finally there for the talented

- Vlad Odobescu BUCHAREST, ROMANIA Special for USA TODAY

“The hackers can be directed for (good) purposes, not only for (criminal) ones.” Anton Rog, director of Romanian Intelligen­ce Service’s Cyberint

Razvan Cernaianu once surfed the Internet anonymousl­y and easily broke into the computer systems for NASA, the Pentagon and Oracle.

Then he became part of a legion of hackers that turned Romania into a center of internatio­nal cyber fraud investigat­ors.

Now, the 25-year-old is cofounder of Cyber Smart Defense, a security firm with 12 employees, annual revenues of $1.45 million and offices in Belgium, Romania, the United Arab Emirates and Santa Barbara, Calif.

A growing number of former criminal hackers has helped Romania — the second-poorest country in the European Union — punch above its weight in the tech industry.

“As knowledge prevails in this area, companies will tend to hire people who have a past in (criminal) hacking,” said Andrei Avadanei, chief executive of Bit Sentinel, an informatio­n security company based in Bucharest. “There are companies that appreciate a past in (that) area.”

Romania’s informatio­n and communicat­ion technology industry employs 120,000 engineers and generates around 6% of the country’s gross domestic product, according to the European Commission. Exports of tech services doubled over the past threes and generated almost $3 billion last year. The industry is set to generate $4.5 billion in two years, according to the Romanian Employers’ Associatio­n of the Software and Services Industry.

Hackers transition­ing to legiti- mate work is a long-awaited success story after the fall of communism in Romania in December 1989. In the 1990s, college graduates in advanced science had few opportunit­ies as Eastern Europe transition­ed to democracy and capitalism. Some became hackers to make a living. Now, as Romania has stabilized a decade after it joined the EU, these people have other options.

“The country created an ecosystem that continuous­ly produced technical and scientific talents,” said Florin Talpeș, chief executive of Bitdefende­r, a Romanian Internet security software company that has hired ex-hackers to provide services for 500 million devices around the world.

In addition to joining the corporate world, former hackers work in the public sector.

“All intelligen­ce services do it,” said Anton Rog, director of Cyberint, part of the Romanian Intelligen­ce Service. “The hackers can be directed for (good) purposes, not only for (criminal) ones. We find hackers who did bad things and served out their punishment — and some of them may respond and agree to help their country.”

In 2013, after the conflict in Ukraine began, Romania, a NATO member, led a multinatio­nal cyber defense campaign to defend its eastern neighbor from Russian attacks on Ukrainian servers.

The country still produces Internet scammers.

In December, three Romanians operating a cyber fraud scheme were extradited to the United States and indicted for infecting 60,000 computers, sending 11 million malicious emails and stealing at least $4 million.

Still, many like Cernaianu now prefer legitimate hacking — and earning a large paycheck. His big break came after his arrest for hacking those A-list names. He was fined $120,000 and served three months in a Romanian jail in 2012 before being given a twoyear suspended sentence.

“The experience helped me grow up,” Cernaianu said about his arrest. “I paid a heavy price, but it was worth it. Now I’m doing what I like the most without worry.”

 ?? REUTERS/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO ?? Romanian Razvan Cernaianu, a former criminal hacker, is co-founder of Cyber Smart Defense, a security firm.
REUTERS/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO Romanian Razvan Cernaianu, a former criminal hacker, is co-founder of Cyber Smart Defense, a security firm.

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