'An illuminating and often scary book' The Daily Telegraph
'Joe has a gift for uncovering stories others can't and turning them into something unforgettable. This book doesn't just tell a story. It grabs you, pulls you in, and doesn't let go.' Jack Rhysider, Darknet Diaries podcast
From the BBC's cyber correspondent and foremost voice on cybercrime comes the insider exposé of the global rise of teen Ctrl+Alt+Chaos.
Cyber correspondent Joe Tidy has investigated and interviewed the most infamous teenage hacker gangs of the past decade for the BBC, and previously for Sky News. Now he unveils the dark digital underbelly where teenage boys are reshaping cybersecurity, cryptocurrency, and organised crime under the noses of their parents.
Throughout he chronicles the life of Julius Kivimaki, aka Zeekill, arguably the most hated hacker in history, from 12-year-old nuisance hacker to a Most Wanted cybercriminal culminating in his 2023 capture. In one of the cruellest hacks in history, he blackmailed 30,000 Finnish psychotherapy patients with their stolen notes. Kivimaki's story gives us vital insights into how hackers find their feet and become dangerous criminals.
Tracking the rise and fall of groups such as LulzSec, HTP, UG Nazi, and Lizard Squad, Ctrl+Alt+Chaos features exclusive interviews with the hackers as well as the police officers trying to stop them. Joe Tidy also draws parallels with recent high-profile attacks from other teenage gangs and ask the question - how can we stop the cycle of teenage boys hijacking life online?
Kiinnostavinta oli lukea brittikirjailijan havaintoja Suomen oikeusjärjestelmästä! Muutoin jäi vähän epätasaiseksi anekdoottikokoelmaksi, vaikka Kivimäen tapaus yritti luoda punaista lankaa.
A deep dive into the world of online hacking communities that was both enticing and depressing. This book is a new angle into the masculinity crisis of today and what led us here.
Anyone like me with a background in programming is likely to be fascinated (if horrified) by books that present stories of hacking and other destructive work mostly by young males, some of whom have remarkable abilities with code, but use it for unpleasant purposes. I remember reading Clifford Stoll's 1990 book The Cuckoo's Egg about the first ever network worm (the 1988 ARPANet worm, which accidentally did more damage than was intended) - the book is so engraved in my mind I could still remember who the author was decades later.
This is very much in the same vein, but brings the story into the true internet age. Joe Tidy gives us real insights into the often-teen hacking gangs, many with members from the US and UK, who have caused online chaos and real harm. These attacks seem to have mostly started as pranks, but have moved into financial extortion and attempts to destroy others' lives through doxing, swatting (sending false messages to the police resulting in a SWAT team turning up), and even physical violence (usually between rival gangs).
With a mix of interviews and research, Tidy gives us valuable insights into the mindsets behind and causes of this hacking activity - how teens get into it, how some manage to turn their lives around (often going into cybersecurity), while others become career criminals. Although Tidy covers a number of gangs over around a 30 year period, a thread running through the book is the work of a single Finnish hacker Julius Kivimäki.
Kivimäki's most notorious hack involved blackmailing individuals by threatening to make public their records from a mental health clinic. However, he had been active since the age of 14 with numerous malicious online activities. For years, aided by the lax way that underage hackers have been treated by the law, Kivimäki had escaped punishment and believed himself untouchable. His story has a classic TV documentary feel (Tidy is a TV reporter), which is perhaps the weakest part of the book. It's fine to give us Kivimaki's life story and details of his hacking, but Tidy gives us far too many similar stories of victims and could tell us more about how these hacks were technically achieved and the practical actions that were taken to fight back and to prove Kivimaki's involvement.
Despite some reservations about the storytelling, this is an extremely useful dive into the impact of hacks and of the character of the person that the book describes as arguably the most hated hacker in history (even other hackers were appalled by his release of mental health data). Though particularly of interest for those with an IT background, we are all at risk from hackers, giving the book a wide potential audience.
(I received an ARC of this book). For a debut, Tidy has done a great job of making this book accessible to people who aren't as familiar with the internet/hacking culture without it being jarring or annoying to those of us who are. The average person isn't going to know what a skiddie is, and I'm not going to know what the Finnish equivalent of 4chan is. The book is really well balanced in this regard. I also find that the blend of discussing the overall culture of teen hackers while also interweaving the story of one of the single most prominent ones of the 2010s was an excellent approach. You get to engage with the life and thought process of Kivimäki while also exploring the underworld that he inhabited. The book did have a bit of an awkward finish, but it's hard to bring it to a tight close when the whole hacking world that we get to see blossom in this book had started to change at the end away from the flashy attacks by teens trying to outdo one another. Another part that Tidy started to explore but didn't get into in depth was the overlap of the teen male hacker culture and the right. I was thinking how when Tidy describes boys getting into the hacking scene by being drawn in while playing multiplayer games online is really similar to how white supremacists recruit young men from the same place. There were also some small things that I think could have been touched up a bit - Jabber is referred to as a messaging service, but it'd be more accurate to call it a protocol, for example. On the whole, though, the pacing is good and it was an extremely enjoyable read. I'd recommend for those who liked Dark Wire: The Incredible True Story of the Largest Sting Operation Ever and Tracers in the Dark: The Global Hunt for the Crime Lords of Cryptocurrency.
Alt + Ctrl + Chaos is the story of modern cybercrime. It is also the story of internet radicalisation, of disenfranchised teens, and of a Finnish child with the ability to shift the landscape of governmental process. It is a lot, but it never feels crammed, in fact there are unexplored avenues that seem utterly fascinating and that it’s a shame we never get to follow. No, the issue is not the density of the book but rather the structure, the way the narrative reads like a recount of several years work, a list of events, groups, and individuals. It feels like a refresher rather than an exploration.
However, this is not to diminish the genuinely impressive work on display here. For starters, Joe Tidy is a very sturdy writer, grounding the reader in a world they, presumably, have little if not no contact with but holding back on the swathes of technical information that could easily plague such a niche field and turn readers off. After all, he is a journalist. That is Tidy’s job, and it is evident here. His prose is clean, sharp, definitive, and workmanlike. At times, this befits a narrative of evasion and capture across decades and continents, but often it gives the writing a lack of actual thrills or deep dives into grander ideas.
These ideas are mentioned briefly (manosphere influence, national security concerns, a prevelance of neurodiverse hackers) but it is clear Tidy is interested in the what rather than the why. And he does tremendous work establishing a narrative, drawing lines between groups and ideas, but this just isn’t enough to truly engross.
Check it out if this is an area you hold any interest in.
I don't really tend to read non-fiction, but I picked this up at the library because it sounded interesting (and for a bit of fresh air), and thoroughly enjoyed it.
This book is delves into the cyclical nature of (predominantly) teenage boys hacking, and competing for who can pull off the biggest hacks between one another in online chatrooms. It gives a bit of history about hacking, the various big-time hacks that hacking gangs such as lizard squad has done, and follows a few of the big time hackers from these eras. It exposes how evil kids can be, how much harm they can cause when the consequences aren't consequential enough.
An interesting aspect of all this is that these kids aren't actually doing anything incredibly groundbreaking, they are mainly scammers with a bit of tech at their fingertips. Most of the time they achieve these hacks by socially engineering people, and gain access to things they shouldn't have access to.
I have learnt a good amount of stuff about a topic I have always been interested in learning about, but didn't really know where to start. This isn't really a book about hacking itself though, its more about the phenomenon of teenage hackers themselves. If you're super interested in the hacking aspect itself, this isn't the book you want to pick up.
I don't want to rate it because rating non-fiction seems.... ehhh, but if this book sounds interesting to you, definitely pick it up.
Mielenkiintoisinta kirjassa oli Tidyn tapa kuvata Suomea - toisin sanoen välähdykset asioista, jotka ovat meille suomalaisille itsestäänselvyyksiä, mutta muille ihmetyksen aiheita.
Teksti oli kovin epätasaista, mikä kummastutti kun kirjoittaja on kuitenkin toimittaja. Paikoin lukeminen puudutti. Ihmetytti myös, miksei kirjoittaja tuonut esiin Vastaamon toimitusjohtajan taustaa ohjelmistokehittäjänä.
Lukiessani nuorisorikollisista jään usein miettimään heidän perheitään. Uhrit saavat ansaitusti empatiaa ja tukea, rikollisen perhe taas usein vain vihaa ja halveksuntaa. Kirjan lopussa oli mielenkiintoinen nosto vanhempien syyllistämisen elitistisyydestä. Jos teet kahta työtä pitääksesi perheesi leivässä, ei ole kohtuullista odottaa, että pystyisit kattavasti valvomaan, mitä lapsesi netissä tekee. Moni hakkereiden vanhemmista ei tuntunut edes ymmärtävän, mistä kyberrikollisuudessa on kyse.
Puutteistaan huolimatta kirja syvensi omaa ymmärrystäni sekä nuorten tekemästä kyberrikollisuudesta että Vastaamo-katastrofista, siitä kolme tähteä.
Jopa tietoturvan parissa ammatikseen toimivalle tämä oli loistava kooste ja yhteenveto häkkeripiireistä ja niiden toiminnasta. Valitettavasti osa tästä porukasta näyttää jatkavan toimintaansa, vankilatuomiot ovat vain pieni hidaste matkalla. Olin itse yllättynyt jenkeissä tapahtuneen maalituksen laajuudesta ja jopa kestosta, säälimätöntä touhua. Lue tämä vaikket olisikaan nörtti tai tietokonevelho, tämä on kirjoitettu niin, että asiaan vihkiytymätönkin ymmärtää.
Suomi mainittu, käytännössä joka ikisellä sivulla. Kertoo pahamaineisimmista hakkereista ja heidän kamalista teoistaan. Ja ikävä kyllä se kaikkein kuuluisin on suomalainen. Todella yksityskohtainen kirja, ja olen tosi kiinnostunut aiheesta niin taas imaisin tämän kiduksiini. Plussaa siitä, että kaikki suomifaktat on oikein ja lähes mitään kliseitä sen suhteen ei esiinny.
The book is - ok - but does neither of what I was led to expect: to get into the mind and world of the culprits, nor to dig into the actual activities. There is good journalism but also not enough depth and originality.
The book puts a lot of weight on some bad actions but does not capture the energy of the world these kids live in.
An excellent read from Joe Tidy - covering the rise, and evolution of teenage hackers and how they commit crimes (often out of boredom and for clout). A fascinating look into how teenage boys specifically can become radicalised on the internet in different ways.
This book mainly covers teenage hacking in the period 2010-2015, which appears to have been something of a golden age for middle class teenagers causing havoc from their bedrooms. The story centres around Julius Kivimäki, whose infamous hack of the Finnish psychotherapy centre Vastaamo took place in 2018, and he received a sentence for 6 years later. Most of the book is the backstory to this offence, plus a final chapter about teenage hackers today.
I appreciate that hackers are easier to interview after they have "retired", which perhaps explains why the book covers mainly distant events.
That said, the reasons for hacking are common among teenagers of all ages. They do it for the buzz, for the lols, and they have the time and aptitude to devote to picking up new skills and finding vulnerabilities. Joe Tidy makes some interesting observations about the lenient sentences hackers receive as juveniles, which virtually makes them immune from prosecution during their most active years. By the time they get to legal adulthood, most have moved on in their lives. A few, like Kivimäki, keep going and risk getting caught.
A good book, but it would be nice to see that final chapter expanded into a sequel.
Publishing date: 05.06.2025 (DD/MM/YYYY) Thank you to NetGalley and Elliott & Thompson for the ARC. My opinions are my own.
Great read. Easy language, written in a way that makes it more like a story instead of a direct essay.
Thorough exploration of the crimes, perpetrators, how it affected the victims, and how normal people can fall into bad crowds and end up a perpetrator.
I learned so much from reading this and highly recommend it to anyone interested in hackers, hacker culture, and specifically the Vastaamo incident.
It's terrifying to think that most hackers make their debut as young, lonely teens, causing mischief in online games like COD.
I have personally had experience dealing with this mischief. Everyone knows about them, everyone can spot them, everyone knows what they're doing, but no one can stop them.
I also remember the gaming hack of Christmas 2014 (spoken about in this book), and I have of course been victim to data theft.
It's horrifying to know this is only their beginning, their first taste of hacking, and the first steps towards what they will become.
These experiences are just small things in comparison to the victims within these pages.
Fantastically researched and written. This book had my full engagement from beginning to end. I share the hope that the young people of today will choose the role of heros over villains.