Veteran Hacker Hired to Keep an Eye On Every Internet Address

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Jeff Moss, the hacker better known as “The Dark Tangent,” has been named Vice President and Chief Security Officer of ICANN, the non-profit corporation that manages the Internet’s names and numbering infrastructure. He is the founder of DEF CON, the world’s largest conference for hackers, as well as the Black Hat security conference. A phone phreaker in his youth, Moss has recently worked as a white hat hacker, working to secure networks from attack.

“He has the in-depth insider’s knowledge that can only come from fighting in the trenches of the on-going war against cyber threats,” said ICANN president Rod Beckstrom in a statement.

Moss is well known for having created the game “Spot the Fed” in which a hacker who thinks he’s identified an undercover federal agent in the crowd at DEF CON can point him out, make his case, and if the crowd agrees, take home a coveted “I Spotted The Fed at DEF CON” t-shirt. Despite this, the Obama Administration appointed Moss to the Department of Homeland Security’s Advisory Council.

The announcement was well received on Twitter, with many offering congratulations. Security writer Joseph Menn put it plainly: “Black Hat founder and smart guy Jeff Moss, aka @thedarktangent, named chief security officer at #ICANN. This is good.”

There are skeptics, however. Veteran ICANN watcher Milton Mueller questions why the organization needs to hire such a high-profile name.

“ICANN doesn’t handle ‘security for the Internet,’ it handles coordination of the DNS root,” he said. “Since ICANN has already implemented DNSSEC at the root, and it already has a Security and Stability Advisory Committee, what exactly does he plan to do there?”

We’ll find out soon enough.

Jerry Brito is a contributor to TIME. Find him on Twitter at @jerrybrito. You can also continue the discussion on TIME’s Facebook page and on Twitter at @TIME.