The new Crumb video, “This Kid Will Never Hack Rappers Again,” dives deep into the notorious journey of hacker King Bob, who went from stealing unreleased music to facing serious legal consequences.
Crumb’s latest YouTube exposé, “This Kid Will Never Hack Rappers Again,” plunges viewers into the chaotic world of cybercrime and the unreleased music trade, spotlighting Noah Michael Urban, infamously known as King Bob. This meticulously crafted documentary unravels the rise and fall of a young hacker who transitioned from Minecraft trolling to orchestrating multimillion-dollar music leaks, all while evading authorities—until his luck ran out.
The video kicks off with King Bob’s early ventures into toxic online communities, where his digital mischief began. As his skills sharpened, so did his ambitions. The film paints an unsettling portrait of a teenager who graduated from stealing cryptocurrencies to penetrating the guarded music vaults of rap’s elite. Urban was linked to a secretive hacking network known as Scattered Spider and ultimately became entangled in The COM, a broader cybercriminal community where hackers would boast about stealing music and other high-profile exploits. Artists like Playboi Carti and Lil Uzi Vert fell victim to this underground scheme—through ‘group buys’ on platforms like Music Mafia and LeakTh.is—which netted King Bob and his accomplices tens of thousands of dollars per leak.
Crumb’s narrative crescendos with the FBI raid that finally brought King Bob’s exploits to a screeching halt. Arrested in Florida, Urban faces charges of wire fraud and aggravated identity theft, with a trail of stolen crypto worth over $800,000 behind him. The video doesn’t just dissect his crimes; it delves into the culture of underground hacking groups like Scattered Spider and their precarious dance with law enforcement. It also provides an excellent breakdown of how the illegal music market works, and the various approaches hackers and SIM’ers have taken to profit off unreleased music.
Disclaimer: The views expressed in the video are those of the content creator and do not necessarily reflect the views of HipHopCanada.
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