In the age of code dominance, where billions of dollars are controlled by lines of code, a frustrated coder crossed the boundary between protest and cybercrime. What began as a grudge became an organized act of sabotage, one that now could land him 10 years in federal prison.
Recently, a contract programmer was fired by a US trucking and logistics company. But unbeknownst to his bosses, he had secretly embedded a digital kill switch in their production infrastructure. A week later, the company’s systems were knocked offline, their settings scrambled, and vital services grounded.
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