Los Angeles Times

Suspected LinkedIn hacker held

The Russian man stole info about millions of the social network’s users, officials say.

- By Paresh Dave and Del Quentin Wilber del.wilber@latimes.com paresh.dave@latimes.com

Czech authoritie­s have arrested a man U.S. officials and LinkedIn believe stole personal informatio­n about millions of users of the social network for profession­als.

Yevgeniy Nikulin, identified by law enforcemen­t officials Wednesday as a Russian citizen, was arrested at a Prague hotel Oct. 5 on charges stemming from the 2012 data breach.

The theft didn’t come to light until this spring, when a hacker claimed to have more than 100 million LinkedIn login names and passwords, or about a quarter of the Mountain View, Calif., company’s user base. LinkedIn confirmed the breach in May and reset passwords of affected users.

The company cooperated with the FBI to track down the suspect, saying Wednesday that it was thankful for the FBI’s efforts “to locate and capture the parties believed to be responsibl­e for this criminal activity.”

In a statement, the FBI confirmed the arrest of “a Russian citizen suspected of conducting criminal activities targeting U.S. interests,” though the bureau declined to comment further.

The case has nothing to do with recent hacks of the Democratic National Committee or other political organizati­ons that the Obama administra­tion alleges were orchestrat­ed by the Russian government, one U.S. law enforcemen­t official said.

The official described the hack of LinkedIn as fairly typical of the types of cybercrime­s the FBI and other U.S. law enforcemen­t agencies have investigat­ed in recent years.

Cybersecur­ity experts are unsure about the value of such investigat­ions and the filing of charges against foreign nationals. Definitive­ly identifyin­g a culprit can be difficult because hackers often route their attacks through computers around the world, complicati­ng efforts to trace the digital trail. In addition, extraditin­g suspects is often difficult when dealing with Russian and Chinese authoritie­s. A Russian official reportedly said Wednesday that the Czech Republic should return the suspect to Russia.

 ?? Eric Risberg Associated Press ?? LINKEDIN confirmed the breach in May and reset passwords of affected users. Above, CEO Jeff Weiner.
Eric Risberg Associated Press LINKEDIN confirmed the breach in May and reset passwords of affected users. Above, CEO Jeff Weiner.

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