Hacker starts hedge fund targeting vulnerable companies

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An infamous computer hacker has now set his sights on Wall Street, opening a hedge fund that will short companies vulnerable to security breaches. Andrew Auernheimer, known by his alias


Weeve, told CNBC's "Power Lunch" that his fund's "primary strategy is to identify a company that has [information security] liabilities that no one knows about


yet." He would then take a leveraged position, put options on the stock and release the liability information to the public.  Read More How cybersecurity pros really feel about hackers


Auernheimer was accused in 2010 of hacking into AT&T's website and stealing more than 100,000 email addresses and later posting them onto a public site. He was convicted and


sentenced to 41 months in prison, but was released after serving just over a year when an appeals court overturned his conviction earlier this month. Aetb | iStock | Getty Images Instead of


hacking, Auernheimer's fund, TRO LLC, will "probe the public surface of a company" and watch hackers to see what they're doing. It's a move that the self-described


online "troll" calls totally legal.  Noted M&A attorney Frank Aquila called Auernheimer's tactics "slimy," but told CNBC "if he does it in a manner that is


otherwise legal, then he will probably be okay." For Auernheimer, it's about a moral obligation to inform the public.  Read More US advises avoiding Internet Explorer until bug


fixed "I feel slimy when I sell an exploit to somebody that I know is going to use it to spy on people illegally," he said. "I'd much rather bring it to the public's


attention so consumers can make informed decisions." And he's not worried about finding investors when the fund has its first offering in August.  "People want to support


liberty and morality…and it will be profitable for the people involved." —_By CNBC's Michelle Fox._