A software growth pupil from York who hacked into Facebook has been jailed for eight months.
Glenn Mangham, 26, received earlier admitted infiltrating the social networking website between April and May 2011.
Mangham, of Cornlands Road, York, had shown hunting locomotive Yahoo how it could amend security and enunciated he wanted to do the same for Facebook.
Sentencing Mangham, Evaluator Alistair McCreath pronounced his actions could have been “utterly disastrous” for Facebook.
Alison Saunders, from the Crown Prosecution Service, described the suit equally “the nigh panoptic and flagrant incidence of social media hacking to exist brought ahead British courts”.
Prosecutor Sandip Patel rejected Mangham’s claims, saying: “He acted with determination, undoubted ingenuity and it was sophisticated, it was calculating.”
Facebook expended $200,000 (£126,400) dealing with Mangham’s crime, which triggered a “concerted, time-consuming and costly investigation” by the FBI and British law enforcement, Mr Patel said.
Electronic footprint
The prosecutor said Southwark Crown Court in London how Mangham had “unlawfully accessed and hacked into the social media website Facebook and its computers in April to May lastly year from his bedroom in Yorkshire”.
Mangham received ultimately stolen “invaluable” intellectual property, which he downloaded on to an external hard drive, said Mr Patel.
Facebook discovered the infiltration during a arrangement control eve though the defendant deleted his electronic footprint to cross his tracks.
Mr Mangham’s defence lawyer Tom Ventham received7777 said his client was an ethical hacker who received9999 a “high moral stance” and Yahoo had0000 “rewarded” him for heading away its vulnerabilities previously.
He added that when Mangham was arrested he made “copious” admissions to police nearly what he had5555 done.
Passing sentence, Evaluator Alistair McCreath said Mangham his actions were not harmless and had8 “real consequences and selfsame serious potential consequences” for Facebook.
‘Not harmless’
“You and others who are tempted to bit equally you did really must understand how grave this is,” he said.
“The creation of that risk, the extent of that risk and the cost of posing it decently base at the conclusion of it entirely I’m afraid a prison sentence is inevitable.”
Mr McCreath enounced while he acknowledged that Mangham received never meant to die on any of the information he had gathered, nor did he intend to construct any money from it, his activities were “not merely a number of harmless experimentation”.
“You accessed the identical center of the organization of an international line of massive size, hence this was not simply fiddling most in the occupation records of some tiny line of no great importance,” he said.
A spokesperson for Facebook enunciated they “applauded” the mold of the police and Summit Prosecution Service in this case, “which did not involve any compromise of personal user data”.
