Business
Mamdani vows to ‘govern as a democratic socialist’ for every construction worker, halal cart vendor and spice-wielding cook in New York City
Published
5 hours agoon
By
Jace Porter
Zohran Mamdani became mayor of New York City on Thursday, taking over one of the most unrelenting jobs in American politics with a promise to transform government on behalf of the city’s striving, struggling working class.
Mamdani, a Democrat, was sworn in at a decommissioned subway station below City Hall just after midnight, placing his hand on a Quran as he took his oath as the city’s first Muslim mayor.
After working part of the night in his new office, Mamdani returned to City Hall in a taxi cab around midday Thursday for a grander public inauguration where U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, one of the mayor’s political heroes, administered the oath for a second time.
“Beginning today, we will govern expansively and audaciously. We may not always succeed, but never will we be accused of lacking the courage to try,” Mamdani told a cheering crowd.
“To those who insist that the era of big government is over, hear me when I say this: No longer will City Hall hesitate to use its power to improve New Yorkers’ lives,” he said.
Throngs turned out in the frigid cold for an inauguration viewing party just south of City Hall on a stretch of Broadway known as the “Canyon of Heroes,” famous for its ticker-tape parades.
Mamdani wasted little time getting to work after the event.
He revoked multiple executive orders issued by the previous administration since Sept. 26, 2024, the date federal authorities announced former Mayor Eric Adams had been indicted on corruption charges, which were later dismissed following intervention by the Trump administration.
Then he visited an apartment building in Brooklyn to announce he is revitalizing a city office dedicated to protecting tenants and creating two task forces focused on housing construction.
‘I will govern as a democratic socialist’
Throughout the daytime ceremony, Mamdani and other speakers hit on the theme that carried him to victory in the election: Using government power to lift up the millions of people who struggle with the city’s high cost of living.
Mamdani peppered his remarks with references to those New Yorkers, citing workers in steel-toed boots, halal cart vendors “whose knees ache from working all day” and cooks “wielding a thousand spices.”
“I was elected as a democratic socialist and I will govern as a democratic socialist,” Mamdani said. “I will not abandon my principles for fear of being deemed ‘radical.’”
Before administering the oath, Sanders told the crowd that most of the things Mamdani wants to do — including raising taxes on the rich — aren’t radical at all.
“In the richest country in the history of the world, making sure that people can live in affordable housing is not radical,” he told the crowd. “It is the right and decent thing to do.”
Mamdani was accompanied on stage by his wife, Rama Duwaji. Adams was also in attendance, sitting near another former mayor, Bill de Blasio.
Actor Mandy Patinkin, who recently hosted Mamdani to celebrate Hannukah, sang “Over the Rainbow” with children from an elementary school chorus. The invocation was given by Imam Khalid Latif, the director of the Islamic Center of New York City. Poet Cornelius Eady read an original poem called “Proof.”
In addition to being the city’s first Muslim mayor, Mamdani is also its first of South Asian descent and the first to be born in Africa. At 34, Mamdani is also the city’s youngest mayor in generations.
Free child care and bus rides
At the watch party on Broadway, onlookers stood shoulder to shoulder gazing up at several jumbotrons and singing and dancing to stave off the cold, with some passing out hot cocoa and hand warmers. Many described feeling as though they were witnessing history.
Among them was Ariel Segura, a 16-year-old Bronx resident, who had arrived five hours earlier to secure a place near the front of the crowd.
“I’m out here fan-girling a politician, it’s kind of crazy,” he said, wiping away tears as Mamdani concluded his speech. “Now it’s time to hold him accountable.”
In a campaign that helped make “affordability” a buzzword across the political spectrum, Mamdani ran on a focused platform that included promises of free child care, free buses, a rent freeze for about 1 million households and a pilot of city-run grocery stores.
Mamdani insisted in his inaugural address that he will not squander his opportunity to implement those policies.
“A moment like this comes rarely. Seldom do we hold such an opportunity to transform and reinvent. Rarer still is it the people themselves whose hands are on the levers of change. And yet we know that too often in our past, moments of great possibility have been promptly surrendered to small imagination and smaller ambition,” he said.
But he will also have to face the everyday responsibilities of running America’s largest city: handling trash and snow and rats, while getting blamed for subway delays and potholes.
In his speech, Mamdani acknowledged the task ahead, saying he knows many will be watching to see whether he can succeed.
“They want to know if the left can govern. They want to know if the struggles that afflict them can be solved. They want to know if it is right to hope again,” he said. “So, standing together with the wind of purpose at our backs, we will do something that New Yorkers do better than anyone else: We will set an example for the world.”
Quick rise to power
Mamdani was born in Kampala, Uganda, the son of filmmaker Mira Nair and Mahmood Mamdani, an academic and author. His family moved to New York City when he was 7, with Mamdani growing up in a post-9/11 city where Muslims didn’t always feel welcome. He became an American citizen in 2018.
He worked on political campaigns for Democratic candidates in the city before he sought public office himself, winning a state Assembly seat in 2020 to represent a section of Queens.
Now that he has taken office, Mamdani and his wife will depart their one-bedroom, rent stabilized apartment in the outer-borough to take up residence in the stately mayoral residence in Manhattan.
The new mayor inherits a city on the upswing, after years of slow recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic. Violent crime has dropped to pre-pandemic lows. Tourists are back. Unemployment, which soared during the pandemic years, is also back to pre-COVID levels.
Yet deep concerns remain about high prices and rising rents.
In opening remarks to the crowd, U.S. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez praised New Yorkers for choosing “courage over fear.”
“We have chosen prosperity for the many over spoils for the few,” she said.
Dealing with Trump
During the mayoral race, President Donald Trump threatened to withhold federal funding from the city if Mamdani won and mused about sending National Guard troops to the city.
But Trump surprised supporters and foes alike by inviting the Democrat to the White House for what ended up being a cordial meeting in November.
“I want him to do a great job and will help him do a great job,” Trump said.
Still, tensions between the two leaders are almost certain to resurface, given their deep policy disagreements, particularly over immigration.
Several speakers at Thursday’s inauguration criticized the Trump administration’s move to deport more immigrants and expressed hope that Mamdani’s City Hall would be an ally to those the president has targeted.
Mamdani also faces skepticism and opposition from some members of the city’s Jewish community over his criticisms of Israel’s government.
Still, Mamdani supporters in Thursday’s crowd expressed optimism he’d be a unifying force.
“There are moments where everyone in New York comes together, like when the Mets won the World Series in ’86,” said Mary Hammann, 64, a musician with the Metropolitan Opera. “This feels like that — just colder.”
___
Associated Press writer Jake Offenhartz contributed to this story.
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Business
Quran used to swear in New York City’s mayor for the first time in history as Zohran Mamdani takes office
Published
5 hours agoon
January 1, 2026By
Jace Porter
Incoming Mayor Zohran Mamdani took his midnight oath of office on a centuries-old Quran, marking the first time a mayor of New York City uses Islam’s holy text to be sworn in and underscoring a series of historic firsts for the city.
The 34-year-old Democrat became mayor in a long-closed subway station beneath City Hall, the first Muslim, first South Asian and first African-born person to hold that position.
These milestones — as well as the historical Quran — reflect the longstanding and vibrant Muslim residents of the nation’s most populous city, according to a scholar who helped Mamdani’s wife, Rama Duwaji, select one of the books.
Most of Mamdani’s predecessors were sworn in on a Bible, although the oath to uphold the federal, state and city constitutions does not require the use of any religious text.
And while he has focused heavily on the issue of affordability during his campaign, Mamdani was outspoken about his Muslim faith. He frequently appeared at mosques across the five boroughs as he built a base of support that included many first-time South Asian and Muslim voters.
A look at the three Qurans that Mamdani used
Two Qurans were to be used during the subway ceremony: his grandfather’s Quran and a pocket-sized version that dates back to the late 18th or early 19th century. It is part of the collection at the New York Public Library’s Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.
That copy of the Quran symbolizes the diversity and reach of the city’s Muslims, said Hiba Abid, the library’s curator for Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies.
“It’s a small Quran, but it brings together elements of faith and identity in New York City history,” Abid said.
For a subsequent swearing-in ceremony at City Hall on the first day of the year, Mamdani will use both his grandfather’s and grandmother’s Qurans. The campaign hasn’t offered more details on those heirlooms.
One Quran’s long journey to Mamdani’s hand
The manuscript was acquired by Arturo Schomburg, a Black Puerto Rican historian whose collection documented the global contributions of people of African descent. While it is unclear how Schomburg came into possession of the Quran, scholars believe it reflected his interest in the historical relationship between Islam and Black cultures in the United States and across Africa.
Unlike ornate religious manuscripts associated with royalty or elites, the copy of the Quran that Mamdani will use is modest in design. It has a deep red binding with a simple floral medallion and is written in black and red ink. The script is plain and readable, suggesting it was created for everyday use rather than ceremonial display.
Those features indicate the manuscript was intended for ordinary readers, Abid said, a quality she described as central to its meaning.
“The importance of this Quran lies not in luxury, but in accessibility,” she said.
Because the manuscript is undated and unsigned, scholars relied on its binding and script to estimate when it was produced, placing it sometime in the late 18th or early 19th century during the Ottoman period in a region that includes what is now Syria, Lebanon, Israel, the Palestinian territories and Jordan.
Abid said the manuscript’s journey to New York mirrors Mamdani’s own layered background. Mamdani is a South Asian New Yorker who was born in Uganda, while Duwaji is American-Syrian.
Identity and controversy
The meteoric rise of a Muslim democratic socialist also brought a surge of Islamophobic rhetoric, amplified by national attention on the race.
In an emotional speech days before the election, Mamdani said the hostility had only strengthened his resolve to be visible about his faith.
“I will not change who I am, how I eat, or the faith that I’m proud to call my own,” he said. “I will no longer look for myself in the shadows. I will find myself in the light.”
The decision to use a Quran has drawn fresh criticism from some conservatives. U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville of Alabama wrote on social media, “The enemy is inside the gates,” in response to a news article about Mamdani’s inauguration. The Council on American-Islamic Relations, a civil-rights group, has designated Tuberville as an anti-Muslim extremist based on past statements.
Such backlash is not new. In 2006, Keith Ellison, the first Muslim elected to Congress, faced condemnation from conservatives after he chose to use a Quran for his ceremonial oath.
Following the inauguration, the Quran will go on public display at the New York Public Library. Abid said she hopes attention surrounding the ceremony — whether supportive or critical — will prompt more people to explore the library’s collections documenting Islamic life in New York, ranging from early 20th century Armenian and Arabic music recorded in the city to firsthand accounts of Islamophobia after the Sept. 11 attacks.
“This manuscript was meant to be used by ordinary readers when it was produced,” Abid said. “Today it lives in a public library where anyone can encounter it.”
___
Associated Press writers Jake Offenhartz in New York and Kim Chandler in Montgomery, Alabama, contributed.
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
Business
Mark Cuban says he doesn’t do calls and prefers email
Published
17 hours agoon
January 1, 2026By
Jace Porter
“No, I don’t do calls,” said the former Shark Tank star and Dallas Mavericks owner in a TikTok video posted by Masterclass. “You know, I’ll engage with you via email, and trust me, I do this all the time. I’m really good at it.”
But Cuban’s logic for his proclivity toward email over the phone is very different from younger generations. He said conversing over email gives him more time to craft a thoughtful response.
“I’ll give you more comprehensive responses than if it was via phone,” said Cuban, who’s worth an estimated $6 billion. “And if we do it by phone, I’m going to forget half the stuff that we talked about because I’ve got so much going on.”
While Cuban is no longer starring on Shark Tank and sold off his majority stake in the Mavericks, he’s still plenty occupied running Mark Cuban Cost Plus Drugs Company and serving as an investor and advisor to the dozens of companies he invested in during his time on the show.
Meanwhile, Gen Zers prefer email or text because they are anxious about talking on the phone. A 2024 study shows nearly a quarter of the generation is so hesitant about talking on the phone that they never answer calls. A college in the U.K. last year even launched a class aimed at helping Gen Z overcome its fear.
While it’s always easy to poke fun at younger generations for their professional-life quirks, the hesitancy for some is actually a deeply rooted fear called “telephobia.” This form of phone anxiety can lead to increased heart rate, nausea, shaking, and trouble concentrating, according to Verywell Mind.
“It speaks to a broader fatigue with immediacy and urgency, where people have grown tired of the hassle culture and obsession with efficiency,” Zoia Tarasova, an anthropologist with consumer insight agency Canvas8, previously told Fortune. “People are quietly rebelling against this immediacy by taking their time to respond to those calls.”
Other business leaders even told Fortune that this telephobia trend has hurt their bottom line. Casey Halloran, CEO and cofounder of online travel agency Namu Travel, said in the 25 years he’s been in business, management has “never seen anything quite like the generational divide” between older and younger travel agents in how they make phone calls. He also said combating telephobia has been a “frequent, uncomfortable topic” at his company, as management has recognized that his younger travel agents register fewer than 50% of the calls compared to older employees.
“As to solutions, we have been doing extensive training, incentives, call observing with our veteran reps, and even hired a business psychologist,” Halloran previously told Fortune. “After more than two years of this struggle, we’re nearly to the point of throwing up hands and embracing SMS and WebChat versus continuing to fight an uphill battle.”
Still, for his own business purposes, Cuban says he prefers emails over phone calls because he can go back and reference what he’s said.
“If we do it via email, I can search for it, always,” he added.
What research tells us about communication styles at work
Just like most business approaches, emailing instead of talking on the phone has its pros and cons.
Research by recruiting firm Robert Walters shows more than half of younger-generation professionals find instant messaging or email, instead of calls or meetings, is the best way to “get things done,” showing how they believe talking over the phone can be inefficient. That’s the “it could have been an email” mentality.
“Younger generations are less inclined to spend hours in a restaurant or cafe when they can have a quick discussion online,” Emilie Vignon, associate director of Robert Walters California, wrote in the 2024 study. To be sure, Vignon also said there are also “downsides” to only conversing via email or text.
“Face-to-face interactions allow for meaningful connections and provide an opportunity for non-verbal communication cues, building trust and rapport with clients and colleagues,” Vignon added. “The subtleties of body language, facial expressions, and tone of voice contribute to a deeper understanding and connection that often cannot be fully conveyed through text or even video chats.”
To be sure, other research from the University of Texas at Austin (UT) and the University of Chicago, as well as studies by McKinsey & Co., show calls can help resolve issues more quickly than an email, especially as workers spend nearly one-third of their time on email. A 2022 study from DePaul University researcher David J. Bouvier also shows that email enables easy information sharing and can reduce stress.
The job posts don’t immediately raise alarms, even though they’re clearly not for tutoring or babysitting.
“Female candidates are a PRIORITY, even if you aren’t from US, if you do not have a clear accent please feel free to inquire,” a public Telegram channel post on Dec. 15 stated. “INEXPERIENCED people are OKAY, we can train you from scratch but we expect you to absorb information and take in what you are learning.” Those who are interested are expected to be available from 12 pm EST to 6 pm EST on weekdays and will earn $300 per “successful call,” paid in crypto.
Of course, the ad isn’t for a legitimate job at all. It’s a recruiting post to join a criminal underground organization, where the job is undertaking ransomware attacks against big corporations. And the ‘gig’ workers being recruited are largely kids in middle and high schools. The enterprise is called The Com, short for “The Community,” and it includes about 1,000 people involved in numerous ephemeral associations and business partnerships, including those known as Scattered Spider, ShinyHunters, Lapsus$, SLSH, and other iterations. Associations change and reframe frequently in what expert researcher Allison Nixon calls “a huge spaghetti soup.” Since 2022, the pipeline has successfully infiltrated U.S. and UK companies with a collective market cap valuation of more than $1 trillion with data breaches, theft, account compromise, phishing, and extortion campaigns. Some 120 companies have been targeted, including brands such as Chick-fil-A, Instacart, Louis Vuitton, Morningstar, News Corporation, Nike, Tinder, T-Mobile, and Vodafone, according to research from cyber intelligence firm Silent Push and court records.
What makes The Com and these groups uniquely dangerous is both their sophistication, and in how they weaponize the youth of their own members. Their tactics exploit teenagers’ greatest strengths, including their technical savvy, cleverness, and ease as native English speakers. But their blindness to consequences, and habit of having conversations in public leaves them vulnerable to law enforcement. Starting in 2024, a series of high-profile arrests and indictments of young men and teenagers ranging in age from 18 to 25 has exposed the significant risk of getting involved in The Com. In August, a 20-year-old in Florida was sentenced to a decade in federal prison and ordered to pay restitution of $13 million for his role in multiple attacks. Unnamed juveniles have also been listed as co-conspirators, and the ages that some are alleged to have begun offending are as young as 13 or 14, according to law enforcement.
Zach Edwards, senior threat researcher at Silent Push, said the structure is a classic one, in which young people do most of the dangerous grunt work in a criminal organization. “The people that are conducting the attacks are at dramatically more risk,” said Edwards. “These kids are just throwing themselves to the slaughter.”
Edwards said the group even tends to slow down during the holidays “because they’re opening presents from Mom under the Christmas tree,” he said. “They’re, you know, 15-year-olds opening stockings.”
And usually parents only find out their kids are involved when the FBI knocks on the door, noted Cynthia Kaiser, former deputy assistant director of the FBI’s cyber division.
“When they’re at a federal felony level is when the parents know because that’s when the FBI comes into play,” she said. Cybercrime lacks all the natural “offramps” that exist with other types of juvenile offenses, explained Kaiser. If a kid defaces a school gym with spray paint, they’re usually caught by a security guard or teacher and they get in trouble. It’s a warning sign for further intervention that doesn’t exist in the online spaces kids frequent.
“It allows these kids to get to the point where they’re conducting federal crimes that no one’s ever talked to them about,” said Kaiser. She often saw “loving parents, involved parents, kids who really did have a lot of advantages, but they just kind of got swept up into this, which I think is easy to do.”
Learning from LinkedIn and Slack
Silent Push, which has tracked Scattered Spider and other groups for years, found that since March 2025, the group has pivoted back to social engineering as the backbone to its ransomware operations, a feat it is incredibly skilled at pulling off. The group allegedly steals employee lists and job titles by compromising HR software platforms and conducting extensive reconnaissance on LinkedIn, said Nixon. With a full roster in hand, the group will call employees directly, pretending to be a new hire with innocuous-seeming questions about platforms, cloud access, and other tech infrastructure. They’ve also been known to read internal Slack message boards to pick up on corporate lingo and acronyms and to find out who to target for permissions to systems. Edwards said the group leans hard on A/B testing to determine which types of calls are most successful and then doesn’t stray far from that path.
Charles Carmakal, chief technology officer of Google Cloud’s Mandiant Consulting, said group members also learn from each other as they work through more intrusions and they share their insights in chat rooms. They often abuse legitimate software in a way that gets them to their ultimate objective without having to create malware or malicious software, he said.
“They’re resourceful,” said Carmakal. “They read the blogs, they understand what the red teams are finding, what the blue teams are finding, what other adversaries are doing, and they’ll replicate some of those techniques as well. They’re smart folks.”
Nixon has seen phishing lures in which attackers claim to be running an internal HR investigation into something a person allegedly said that was racist or another type of complaint. “They’re really upsetting false accusations, so the employee is going to be quite upset, quite motivated to shut this down,” said Nixon. “If they can get the employee emotional, they’ve got them on the hook.”
Once the employee gets rattled, the attackers will direct them to a fake helpdesk or HR website to input their login credentials. In more sophisticated companies that use multi-factor authentication or physical security keys, the attackers use the company’s remote software like AnyDesk or TeamViewer to eventually get inside internal networks. “They are very savvy as to how these companies defend themselves and authenticate their own employee users, and they’ve developed these techniques over a long period of time,” said Nixon.
Plus, Scattered Spider has picked up on a key asymmetry in authentication, said Sherri Davidoff, founder of LMG Security. When help desks call employees, they rarely have to identify themselves or prove they work for a company. Whereas when employees contact help desks, they have to verify who they are.
“Many organizations, either intentionally or unintentionally, condition their staff to comply with help desk requests,” said Davidoff. “[Threat actors] will then mimic the urgency, they’ll mimic any stress, and they’ll mimic the sense of authority that these callers have.”
Kids Today
One of Scattered Spider’s signatures is that the group is incredibly chaotic, noted Greg Linares, a former hacker who is now a cybersecurity researcher at Eeye Digital Security. Unlike more established ransomware operators, Scattered Spider members communicate directly with victims’ C-level executives without formal negotiators. “They don’t have a professional person in the middle, so it’s just them being young adults and having fun,” said Linares. “That unpredictability among the group makes them charismatic and dangerous at the same time.”
The Scattered Spider attacks have featured brazen and audacious behaviors, like renaming the CEO to something profane in the company email address book, or calling customers directly and demanding ransom payments—general troll behavior “for the lols,” said Edwards. Serious criminal actors involved in ransomware money-making schemes, usually working for nation states like Russia or North Korea, use Signal or encrypted services, he added. The younger Scattered Spider members often create new channels on Telegram and Discord if they get banned and announce the new channel and make it public again.
Experienced criminals “don’t run out there and create another Telegram, like, ‘Come on, everybody, back in the pool, the water’s fine,’” said Edwards. “It is absolutely what kids do.”
CrowdStrike senior vice president of counter adversary Adam Meyers told Fortune these techniques have been honed after years of escalating pranks in video game spaces. Kids will start by stealing items or destroying other kids’ worlds in video games like Minecraft, mostly to troll and bully each other, said Meyers. From there, they progress to conducting identity takeovers, usually because they want account names that have been claimed by users long ago, said Meyers. The account takeovers then evolve into targeting crypto holders.
“Many of these teen offenders have been recruited and groomed from gaming sites, first with the offer of teaching then how to acquire in-game currency, and moving on to targeting girls for sextortion,” said Katie Moussouris, founder of startup Luta Security. “From there, they are encouraged to shift to other hacking crimes. There’s a well-established criminal pipeline that grooms young offenders to avoid adult prosecutions.”
A complaint unsealed in September in New Jersey alleged that UK teenager, Thalha Jubair, 19, was part of Scattered Spider starting from when he was 15 or 16. Jubair is facing a maximum of 95 years in prison in a scheme that U.S. authorities allege infiltrated 47 unnamed companies including airlines, manufacturers, retailers, tech, and financial services firms, and raked in more than $115 million in ransom payments.
Owen Flowers, 18, was charged along with Jubair in the UK, according to the UK’s National Crime Agency. Both are accused in attacks on Transport for London and for allegedly conspiring to damage two U.S. healthcare companies. Flowers and Jubair have pleaded not guilty and a trial is set for next year.
Those charges came after another alleged Scattered Spider ringleader, Noah Michael Urban, 20, pleaded guilty to wire fraud, identity theft, and conspiracy charges and was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison in August. He was ordered to pay $13 million in restitution.
Four others, all under the age of 25, were charged alongside Urban in 2024 for allegedly being part of Scattered Spider’s cyber intrusion and crypto theft scheme, including an unnamed minor. In another alleged Scattered Spider attack, at least one unnamed juvenile turned himself in to police in Las Vegas for taking part in attacks on gaming companies in Las Vegas, according to police.
‘Female candidates are a PRIORITY’
The field of cybercrime is almost exclusively dominated by male actors, but Scattered Spider has effectively recruited teenage and young adult women who have become a strategic asset. Nixon of Unit 221B said the number of girls in The Com is “exploding.”
Arda Büyükkaya, a senior threat intelligence analyst at EclecticIQ based in the EU, said he’s also found that some callers are using AI systems that will alter their voices to mimic a regional accent or other features, such as a woman “with a neutral tone” who offers pleasantries, such as “take your time,” that also downplay suspicions.
Social engineering is rife with gender presumptions, said Karl Sigler, senior security manager at Trustwave SpiderLabs. Men tend to lean on their positions of authority as a senior executive or even a CFO or CEO, while women take the tactic of being in distress.
“Women tend to be more successful at social engineering because, frankly, we’re underestimated,” said Moussouris of Luta Security. “This holds true whether trying to talk our way in by voice or in person. Women aren’t viewed as a threat by most and we’ve seen this play out in testing organizations where women may succeed in getting in and men don’t.”
In Nixon’s observation, The Com finds young women are useful “for social engineering purposes, and they’re also useful to them for just straight-up sexual purposes.” Some of the girls respond to ads in gaming spaces that specify “girls only” and others are victims of online sexual violence, said Nixon.
“The people running these groups are still almost all male, and very sexist,” said Nixon. “The girls might be doing the low-level work, but they’re not going to be taught anything more than the bare minimum that they need to know. Knowledge is power in these groups, and mentorship is not given to girls.”
Many involved seem to be seeking money, notoriety among the group, a sense of belonging, and the rush and thrill of a successful attack, experts said.
Linares, who is known as the youngest ever hacker arrested in Arizona at age 14, said the hacking community he joined as a teen became closer to him than his actual family members at the time. If he were born in this era, Linares said he “absolutely” could see himself alerted to this type of crime and the money-making potential. Since sharing his story on a podcast over this summer, he’s heard from kids who are involved in cyber crime and he urges them to participate in legal bug bounty programs. Many have told him they are also autistic—a diagnosis Linares himself didn’t get until he was well in his 30s.
“A lot of these kids come from broken households, alcoholic parents, and they’re on the path of doing drugs as well,” said Linares. “Life is hard and they’re just looking for a way through.”
However, there is more to the picture. Marcus Hutchins, a cybersecurity researcher who famously stopped the global WannaCry ransomware attack and who previously faced federal charges related to malware he created as a teenager, said he’s learned that a lot of kids involved come from stable backgrounds with supportive parental figures.
“A lot of these are privileged kids who come from loving families and they still somehow end up doing this,” Hutchins said. “How does someone who has everything going for them decide that they’re going to go after a company that is just absolutely going to insist that they go to jail?”
According to Kaiser, who after leaving the FBI joined cybersecurity firm Halcyon, the complexity lies in that the crimes are happening online and in secret. And in the grand tradition of parents not understanding kids’ slang, parents often find messages incomprehensible, which isn’t unusual, noted Nixon.
Despite the natural tendency to underestimate kids’ abilities or always see the best in them as parents, Kaiser said parents have to protect kids—and it might mean getting uncomfortable about monitoring their online behavior. Even with her background as a top FBI cyber official, Kaiser said she still struggles as a parent.
“I was the deputy director of the FBI’s Cyber Division, and I still don’t think I know how to fully secure my kids’ devices,” she said. “If my kid was acting foolish on the street, I’ll get a text. We’re not getting those alerts as parents, and that makes it really hard.”
Fortune contacted all the companies named in this article for comment. Some declined to comment and some could not comment directly due to ongoing investigations. Others noted their commitment to strong cybersecurity and that they had quickly neutralized threats to their systems.
Mamdani vows to ‘govern as a democratic socialist’ for every construction worker, halal cart vendor and spice-wielding cook in New York City
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Quran used to swear in New York City’s mayor for the first time in history as Zohran Mamdani takes office
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