Showing posts with label Classified Documents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Classified Documents. Show all posts

Monday, 29 October 2012

Anonymous publish Classified Documents from Greek Finance Ministry server

Collective hacking group Anonymous leaks username-passwords and classified documents from Greek Finance Ministry server. Just a few days before the Greek Parliament is scheduled to vote on a $17.45 billion spending cut and tax hike plan. Attack was carried out under anonymous operation named - #opGreece.

The attackers claim that they wanted to expose the date on the state of Greek economy so that all Greeks know the truth and thus just days before the 13.5-billion-euro austerity package goes to Parliament for voting.

"Citizens of Greece you are paying Banks and international hedge funds. They own your lives. Revolt before it's too late. The austerity measures should not pass." Anonymous said in note.

The attackers claimed that their aim is to expose all the data of Greek economy so all Greek citizens know the truth.

The documents are uploaded to Anon file sharing site: -
https://anonfiles.com/file/5c9fa9402e62bffd2f569ac3d118fbcd
https://anonfiles.com/file/a50145cddeb310ad8250c6c97d569887
- See more at: http://thehackernews.com/2012/10/anonymous-leak-classified-documents.html#_
The documents are uploaded to Anon file sharing site: - See more at: http://thehackernews.com/2012/10/anonymous-leak-classified-documents.html#_
The documents are uploaded to Anon file sharing site: - See more at: http://thehackernews.com/2012/10/anonymous-leak-classified-documents.html#_

Tuesday, 11 September 2012

LulzSec hacker arrested over Sony attack

A second member of the LulzSec hacking was arrested by US authorities in connection with attacks on Sony Pictures Europe .
US police was arrested Raynaldo Rivera, 20, a member of the hacking group LulzSec, on charges that he took part in breach of the computer systems belonging to Sony Pictures Europe.

The indictment, which was unsealed on Tuesday, accuses Rivera and co-conspirators of stealing information from Sony Pictures Europe's computer systems in May and June 2011 using an SQL injection attack – which exploits flaws in the handing of data input for databases to take control of a system – against the studio's website.SQL injection, or SQLi, is an increasingly common technique used by hackers to break into systems.

The attack, which may have leaked credit card details for millions of users, has never been traced to any group – although Sony suggested not long afterwards that Anonymous might have been involved.Since then it has given no further details about who it suspects of carrying out the attack, and no data from the attack has ever been posted publicly.

"From a single injection we accessed EVERYTHING," the hackers said in a statement at the time. "Why do you put such faith in a company that allows itself to become open to these simple attacks?"

Authorities have said the Sony breach ultimately cost the company more than $600,000 (£378,000).
An accused British hacker, Ryan Cleary, 20, was indicted by a US grand jury in June on charges related to LulzSec attacks on several media companies, including Sony Pictures.

The rise of LulzSec saw a burst of similar "crews" aiming to hack sites, but since then Anonymous has focussed on providing an outlet for documents released by WikiLeaks.

Sunday, 10 June 2012

Linkedin hacked , 6.46 million Passwords Leaked

A user on a Russian forum has claimed to have downloaded 6.46 million user hashed passwords from LinkedIn.

It looks as though some of the weaker passwords — around 300,000 of them — may have been cracked already. Other users have been seen reaching out to fellow hackers in an apparent bid to seek help in cracking the encryption.

Finnish security firm CERT-FI is warning that the hackers may have access to user email addresses also, though they appear encrypted and unreadable.

A source said they had searched and discovered their password in the cache. It has been reported that the passwords were encrypted using the SHA-1 algorithm — which is known for its flaws — but unless a password is weak, it may take a while to decrypt the remaining cache.

LinkedIn has more than 150 million users worldwide. This apparent hack could affect less than 10 percent of its user base, but it will strike a damaging blow to the ‘professional’ social network’s reputation.