Name William Genovese | ||
B0ss of b0sses aka william genovese xbox version
William Genovese is a former greyhat hacker turned security professional, who goes by the alias illwill.
Contents
- B0ss of b0sses aka william genovese xbox version
- History
- Website Controversy
- Hackerspace
- Consulting
- References
History
In early 2000's, Genovese was a former figure in a loose-knit group of computer hackers who called themselves illmob. illmob.org, that was a security community website ran by Genovese, which, at the time, had many high profile incidents related to it. Genovese now works as a private security consultant involved in the computer security industry, doing penetration testing, phishing, OSINT threat intel & mitigation. Along with contributions to the Metasploit project.
Website Controversy
In 2003, his website was the first to release 0day code that exploited the MS03-026 Windows RPC vulnerability, which was later used by unknown hackers to create variants of the W32/Blaster Worm. In response, Genovese released a tool he coded to remove the worm from infected Windows PC's.
In 2004 federal authorities charged Genovese with Theft of a Trade Secret (US Code Title 18, section 1832), for selling the incomplete WindowsNT/2000 Microsoft source code to Microsoft investigators and federal agents. Even though the code sold was already widely distributed on the Internet prior to his sale. Authorities used an obscure law enacted under the Economic Espionage Act of 1996, which had been traditionally adjudicated through private civil litigation.
In 2005, the site had posted leaked images and phone book from Paris Hilton's T-Mobile Sidekick phone that were obtained from a fellow hacker. Reportedly, the data was obtained by Social engineering (security) and exploiting a vulnerability in a BEA WebLogic Server database function that allowed an attacker to remotely read or replace any file on a system by feeding it a specially-crafted web request. BEA produced a patch for the bug in March 2003 which T-Mobile failed to apply. The website was also mentioned in news articles, in connection with Fred Durst's sex tape leak which was stolen from his personal email account.
Hackerspace
From 2010 until his resignation in 2016, Genovese co-founded, and was a board member of a 501(3)(c) non-profit Hackerspace in Connecticut called NESIT, which he helped the local community by offering free classes on various network security topics, personal internet safety, reverse engineering, embedded electronic projects, 3-D Printing and design. He helped build a virtualized pen-testing lab with a large server farm donation from a pharmaceutical company, where users can simulate attacking and penetrating machines in a safe lab environment.
Consulting
Since 2008, Genovese has reinvented himself as a security consultant, public speaker and teacher. He does security consulting for Fortune 500 companies, performs penetration testing services for the world's largest companies. He was also a co-founder and speaker at security conferences eXcon and BSidesCT in 2011, 2014, 2016, 2017. In 2015 he was a panelist at Defcon 23 in Las Vegas for a charity fundraiser to help a fellow hacker who was stricken with terminal cancer.