13-year-old schoolboy hacked Apple in the hope of getting a job

  Sometimes you want something so much that you do not realize you need it, and ambition leads you to do things you do not do otherwise. Let them tell this 17-year-old Australian man, who has worked hard for Apple, to break into the company's servers 2 times.

This young man, whose name we can not know for legal reasons, is a resident of South Australia, specifically Adelaide. The court convicted young Adelaide boy of breaking Apple's systems in 2015 and 2017. The boy, along with another young teenager, broke Apple's servers for the first time when he was 13 years old according to ABC News information and related internal documents.
Access Apple's servers to create false credentials that can access internal data. This Australian young man has a wealth of experience in IT issues, and his lawyers justified these actions in a way we did not expect: "He wanted to work with Apple."
According to his lawyer Mark Twiggs, Apple's teenage fan is expected to find a job in the company thanks to his level of expertise as he was unaware of the seriousness of his actions until it was too late. "He had no idea of ​​the seriousness of the offense, and he hoped that when he found out he could get a job in this company, he did not know that this would not do anything to hurt him in the end. Europe before, and a similar person was arrested and ended up being hired by the company. "
 The judge's verdict was not severe on this young teenager. He gave him a 9 month warranty for his good behavior and encouraged him to use his computer skills for good. The boy was lucky, because apparently he found a kind of uncle in court.
 Fortunately, this young man did not affect Apple economically or intellectually after the hacking, and customer data was not compromised. Apple's position in its statement was the following:
"At Apple, we protect our networks with vigilance and we have dedicated teams of information security professionals working to detect and respond to threats, in which case our team found unauthorized access, contained it and informed the police about the incident." We believe that the safety of our users' data is one of our greatest responsibilities.
The penetration was originally reported to the FBI, in which the Australian Federal Police participated and the teenagers were arrested.

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