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Kingdom of Lies

Unnerving Adventures in the World of Cybercrime

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Wow. Kate Fazzini is the rare top-level reporter who can make you see, smell and feel a hidden world, not just understand it. Cybercrime (and security) has found its Michael Lewis." —Bret Witter, co-author of the #1 NYT bestseller The Monuments Men
One of BookRiot's "50 of the Best Books to Read This Summer"
In the tradition of Michael Lewis and Tom Wolfe, a fascinating and frightening behind-the-scenes look at the interconnected cultures of hackers, security specialists, and law enforcement

A 19-year-old Romanian student stumbles into a criminal ransomware ring in her village. Soon she is extorting Silicon Valley billionaires for millions—without knowing the first thing about computers.
A veteran cybersecurity specialist has built a deep network of top notch hackers in one of the world's largest banks. But then the bank brings in a cadre of ex-military personnel to "help."
A cynical Russian only leaves his tiny New Jersey apartment to hack sports cars at a high performance shop in Newark. But he opens his door to a consultant who needs his help.
A hotel doorman in China once served in the People's Army, stealing intellectual property from American companies. Now he uses his skills to build up a private side-business selling the data he takes from travelers to Shanghai's commercial center.
Kingdom of Lies follows the intertwined stories of cybercriminals and ethical hackers as they jump from criminal trend to criminal trend, crisis to crisis. A cybersecurity professional turned journalist, Kate Fazzini illuminates the many lies companies and governments tell us about our security, the lies criminals tell to get ahead, and the lies security leaders tell to make us think they are better at their jobs than they are.
Like Traffic set in the cybercrime world, Kingdom of Lies is as entertaining as it is eye opening.

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    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2019
      A breezy exploration of the many bad guys who lie in wait out on the other end of the cyberwire. "What makes cybersecurity complicated is the complexity of human beings," writes Fazzini, a former Wall Street Journal reporter who is now the cybersecurity reporter for CNBC. The hacker community, for instance, is hardly a community at all: There are people who hack computers in just about every human community, period, and not all of them are up to no good. It's against the ones who do have nefarious ends that the cybersecurity community has evolved, and again, it's a rather motley congregation, with few Lisbeth Salanders among it; indeed, as Fazzini writes, only 9 percent of the workers in the field are women. "I know a lot of them," she notes, "maybe because we are such a rare lot." They need to be less rare, she adds, because there's greater demand than supply for cybersecurity experts, and that need will only grow, requiring people who are risk-averse, hypervigilant, and imaginative in thinking of scenarios that few other people would consider--"three characteristics of so many new mothers," she concludes. Threats come from all sides. Some of the author's cases in point are pimply experimenters; some are very thoughtful, technologically adept sociopaths; some are the agents of unfriendly governments such as Russia and Iran, about the second of which she describes the countermeasures taken by one lonely white-hat hacker: "As the suits pile in, act interested, and watch Carl sit at the computer and fight the Iranian Army every fucking day, as he becomes more detached and more alone." The most susceptible targets, writes Fazzini, are banks, which are probed and tested every waking moment for weaknesses from every corner of the globe, all good reasons for being hypervigilant about online transactions and remembering to change your password regularly. Good reading for anyone contemplating a career in cybersecurity and a useful tool for turning people's thoughts in that direction.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      May 15, 2019
      In the past decade, attacks on online security and privacy reached a new level of warfare. Social engineering, the use of psychological strategies to gain access to personal information, plays a large role in how hackers collect data, making a person's offline activity just as integral to the defense of their information as digital precautions. In this vertical slice of the cybersecurity profession, CNBC reporter Fazzini gives readers an up-close look at the business of cybercrime. As she tells the stories of events throughout the 2010s, she covers the rise of denial-of-service attacks on banks and the proliferation of fake news in the lead-up to the 2016 election. Even with names changed and identifying details withheld, Fazzini gives human faces to the people behind breaches of privacy and the cybersecurity experts who work to prevent them. These professionals reveal just how much of this effort is performed by individuals rather than robotic programs, while Fazzini effectively conveys the ways cybercrimes are constantly evolving with the capability of becoming even more insidious in the future.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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