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A 34-year-old San Francisco man was arraigned April 11 in federal District Court on charges in connection with the Sept. 17, 2015, hacking of AlmanacNews.com and other websites operated by Embarcadero Media, the Palo Alto-based publisher of community newspapers, including the Almanac.
Ross M. Colby was charged by a federal grand jury in a sealed five-count indictment on Thursday, April 6, following an 18-month investigation by the FBI’s Computer Hacking and Intellectual Property unit in San Jose. The indictment was unsealed on April 11.
At the arraignment, Mr. Colby entered a plea of not guilty, posted a $50,000 bond and was released. He was represented by Palo Alto criminal defense attorney Vicki Young and will appear before U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh in San Jose for a status conference on May 24.
Mr. Colby is charged with one felony for intentional damage to a protected computer, another for attempted damage to a protected computer and three misdemeanors for obtaining information from a protected computer.
If he is convicted, the two felonies carry maximum sentences of 10 years imprisonment and $250,000 in fines.
The indictment alleges that Mr. Colby gained access to the corporate Google email account of an Embarcadero Media employee in July 2015 and then used information to cancel four domain names and change the company’s email exchange records to redirect email.
The charges contained in the indictment are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
On the evening of Sept. 17, 2015, all of the websites operated by Embarcadero Media were taken over and all content removed. The home pages were replaced with an image of Guy Fawkes and a message stating the sites had been hacked because Embarcadero had “failed to remove content that has been harmful to the wellbeing and safety of others” and threatened that “Failure to honor all requests to remove content will lead to the permanent shutdown of all Embarcadero Media Group Websites.”
The URL header on each website stated: “Unbalanced journalism for profit at the cost of human right. Brought to you by the Almanac.”
The Almanac, serving Menlo Park, Portola Valley, Woodside and Atherton, is one of Embarcadero Media’s four newspapers. The company also publishes the Palo Alto Weekly, Mountain View Voice and Pleasanton Weekly and websites in each community.
The company’s IT staff was able to regain control of the sites and shut them down within an hour of the hack so they were no longer accessible to the public, but it took almost a full day to restore the content from back-ups and bring the sites back up.
The Palo Alto Police Department conducted a precautionary search of the company’s offices at 2 a.m. on the night of the hacking, and the FBI began an immediate investigation and secured company computer records and logs later that day.
According to Embarcadero Media President Bill Johnson, the damage went far beyond the unauthorized access to and seizure of the websites. Many internal company computer records, including all employee user accounts and client account information and billing records, were erased, Johnson said. Fortunately, the company’s back-up systems made it possible to restore all the information over the following week.
The indictment offers no clues as to Mr. Colby’s motivation or connection to The Almanac or Embarcadero Media.
Mr. Colby attended Wentworth Institute of Technology in Boston, Massachusetts, his father John Colby, confirmed Wednesday. He was raised in Athol, Massachusetts, a small town of about 11,300 people in northwestern Massachusetts.
According to his LinkedIn page, Mr. Colby claims to be a software researcher and developer at EMC2, now a subsidiary of Dell Technologies.
Dell EMC has offices throughout the Bay Area, including in the Stanford Research Park, according to its website.
Company spokeswoman Lauren Lee said that Dell does not employ anyone by Mr. Colby’s name.
Mr. Colby could not be reached for comment. His father said on Wednesday (April 12) that he did not know anything about the indictment or his son’s arrest.
Ms. Young, Mr. Colby’s attorney, did not return a request for comment.
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Let’s just get rid of the Internet gradually and go back to paper. Look, how many hours have you put into updates, virus scans, using your smart phone to then use your computer all over again? Is it really worth it all to computerize everything? The reason why Silicon Valley started was because it was the big military Satellite manufacturer, not the big computer creation and hacking alliance. It’s time to go back to 1960s America and stop being the California that the Millenials and grand children want our State and Our Country to be. Every time I see a lady or a man on their smart phone on the TV, I cringe. Remember when we all said our children looked like addicts with their Game Boys, look at all of us now.
In addition, my friend has moles on her hip from where she keeps her smart phone, and my grand children have rashes on their legs from them too. My daughter indicates that she said the US doesn’t have any restrictions on radiation, whereas England and other countries, do.
“It’s time to go back to 1960s America and stop being the California that the Millenials and grand children want our State and Our Country to be.”
Nice try — but no. There’s no going back. And honestly, the 1960’s were NOT all that wonderful — remember the Vietnam War? The violence that came out of the civil rights movement? You want to go back to *that*?
“In addition, my friend has moles on her hip from where she keeps her smart phone, and my grand children have rashes on their legs from them too. My daughter indicates that she said the US doesn’t have any restrictions on radiation, whereas England and other countries, do.”
Ehhhh…this sounds like what you would find on conspiracy sites.