A man from Maryland, USA, was caught three months after he intentionally sent an animated tweet to a Newsweek journalist. The flickering animation caused journalist Kurt Eichenwald to have an epileptic seizure. The cybercriminal had it perfectly planned because he used an anonymous Twitter account, had a prepaid SIM card that he bought with cash so it wasn't tied to his name, and had no credit card or other identifiable information listed on the social network account.
After a 3 month investigation, the FBI this morning arrested the man who assaulted me using a strobe on Twitter that triggered a seizure.
— Kurt Eichenwald (@kurteichenwald) March 17, 2017
It was almost impossible to find any details about the cyber attacker, butonec hope emerged. With the cooperation of AT&T, investigators discovered that the phone that sent the tweet was iPhone 6. They were able to find out what theCloud account is given iPhone tied up, and accordingly they found John Rivello Salisbury. They searched his house, during which they found out that it was indeed him. And when they looked into iMessage and photos on his iPhone, they discovered that he was the one who attacked the journalist.
John Rivello is accused of cyberstalking with intent to cause bodily harm or murder, for which he faces up to 10 years in prison. According to lawyer Kurt Eichenwald, using a flashing message against a known epileptic is no different than sending a bomb in the mail or anthrax in an envelope.
Source: Cult of Mac
That's too much, about 20 years ago the magazine HROM was published... you are already on his level.
Learn about epilepsy first and then drink wisely.