Most Popular
-
1
Opposition head pleads for support in ‘fight against Yoon dictatorship’
-
2
Koreans prefer cash in Chuseok gifting for parents
-
3
Apple to launch iPhone15 series in S. Korea on Oct. 13
-
4
S. Korea, US conduct underwater search operation for downed jet, Korean War remains
-
5
BTS' Suga begins military service
-
6
[Well-curated] A weekend for fall-time festivities
-
7
Surveillance cameras to be a must in hospital operating rooms
-
8
Opposition party leader ends 24-day hunger strike for treatment
-
9
U.S. finalizes national security 'guardrails' for CHIPS funding
-
10
Ministry uncovers 1,802 Youth Protection Act violations
Teenage hacker arrested for leaking mock test grades
By Lee Jung-younPublished : June 1, 2023 - 16:43

A teenage hacker and an operator of a Telegram chatroom in his 20s were arrested on the charge of leaking scores of 270,000 high school sophomores of a mock scholastic ability test held nationwide in November last year, the police said Thursday.
The 19-year-old has allegedly broke into the Gyeonggi Office of Education‘s server on Feb. 18 and stole the mock test results of high school sophomores, according to Gyeonggi Nambu Provincial Police Agency. The teenager gave the data to the Telegram chatroom operator who later distributed at his chatroom which had about 18,000 participants.
The teen hacker is also accused of using overseas IP addresses 200 times for five months since October last year, to break into the education office‘s server. He downloaded several pieces of data about 100 times, according to investigators.
The education office was completely unaware of the damage during the five months the teen was constantly hacking the server.
The teen hacker told investigators that he was curious about his test grades and found a vulnerability of the server by chance. He confessed to transferring the data to a Telegram chatroom to show off his skills.
In a separate case in April, police caught seven others, including three suspects who illegally hacked the education office's server for test scores, three suspects who distributed the hacked data, and one suspect who tried to sell the data. Their cases have been sent to the prosecution without taking them into custody.