Because the American president would be attending the conference for two days, the Secret Service had immediately begun investigating every possible political opponent of the WTO. Almost as a reflex, the first one it looked at was “Randy Andy,” Randalar Singh Anderjit, for he headed up an anti-free trade group that was regularly blamed, sometimes legitimately, for disrupting international conferences. Everyone involved with the WTO expected interference from Randy Andy, but what had caught the interest of both the Secret Service and the ICS team was an unknown face, a long-haired, twenty-something male who showed up in photographs alongside Anderjit right after the Quebec conference was announced. A search of police records revealed that he was on the FBI's list of known hackers. A quick dig into some archived files identified him as an ex-student, first of McGill University in Montreal, where Randy Andy had studied, and then of Berkeley in California, expelled from both schools for allegedly hacking into their records and altering reams of data.
基于1个网页-相关网页
应用推荐