Showing posts with label cybernews. Show all posts

Anonymous Leaked 3900 Personal Datasets In The Retaliation Of Barrett Brown

Anonymous Leaked 3900 Personal Datasets In The Retaliation Of Barrett Brown


Anonymous has just publish another database in retaliation for the arrest of Barrett Brown. 3900 personal datasets from International Pharmaceutical Federation, the global federation of national associations representing 3 million pharmacists and pharmaceutical scientists around the world, have been exposed on AnonPaste. 

You can see it from here


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Anonymous's Barrett Brown Busted for Threatening FBI Agent

Anonymous's Barrett Brown Busted for Threatening FBI Agent



Barrett Brown, who has often stepped forward as a kind of spokesguy for Anonymous, was arrested during a live chat late Wednesday night. Wired reports the incident occurred as Brown chatted with his girlfriend and severals others on TinyChat, as you can see this in a video.


 

Two minutes into the recorded chat session, loud voices can be heard in the background of Brown’s residence while the woman in the room with him is in front of the computer screen. She quickly closes the computer screen, but the audio continued to capture events in the room as the FBI appeared to be strong-arming Brown to put handcuffs on him. Brown can be heard yelling in the background.


Recently Anonymous has posted that 
Additional information regarding the arrest of Barrett Brown. Barrett will be in US District Court in Dallas today at 2pm CST for arraignment. He was taken into custody, according to criminal law specialist Leiderman Devine, as a direct result of threats made to FBI officer Robert Smith in a series of videos he published on YouTube.




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Reliance Netconnect Official Site Got Hacked

Reliance Netconnect Official Site Got Hacked
Reliance Netconnect Official Site Got Hacked

Reliance Netconnect Official site got Hacked by a hacker name Dr-Freak, according to deface page it seems he belongs to Napster Group. We don't know yet, why this hack was done. 

You can see the mirror from here

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Need to increase cyber space security-Said Manmohan Singh

Against the backdrop of recent cyber attacks on India's key installations, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Saturday warned that the nation's vulnerability to cyber crime is increasing.
"Our country's vulnerability to cyber crime is escalating as our economy and critical infrastructure become increasingly reliant on interdependent computer networks and the Internet," Manmohan Singh said, while addressing a three-day national conference of directors general and inspectors general of police of the states and central paramilitary forces.
"Large-scale computer attacks on our critical infrastructure and economy can have potentially devastating results," he warned the police chiefs, in the presence of ministers of state V. Narayanasamy, Mullapally Ramachandran and Jitendra Singh.

The prime minister said the government is working on a robust cyber security structure that addresses "threat management and mitigation, assurance and certification, capacity building and research."

"To this end, we need to build partnerships between government, academia and the private sector," the prime minister said.
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Pirate Bay Founder Arrest Related To Tax Hack, Not For Piracy

Pirate Bay Founder Arrest Related To Tax Hack, Not For Piracy
Pirate Bay Founder Arrest Related To Tax Hack, Not For Piracy



The arrest of Pirate Bay co-founder Gottfrid Svartholm last week resulted in much speculation about the motives and forces driving the action. In most scenarios it was assumed that Svartholm was arrested for his role in The Pirate Bay, but this turns out to be untrue. Sources confirmed to TorrentFreak that Svartholm is being held at the interior ministry’s counter terrorism department in connection with the alleged hacking of a Swedish IT company and the subsequent leak of thousands of tax numbers.



Last week police arrested Pirate Bay co-founder Gottfrid Svartholm in the Cambodian capital Phnom Penh.

Initially little was known about the reasons for the arrest, but after a few days the authorities confirmed that Sweden was the driving force behind the actions. According to a spokesperson for the Cambodian police, Svartholm’s detainment is connected to alleged cyber-crimes.

“His arrest was made at the request of the Swedish government for a crime related to information technology,” he said.

Following this statement it was assumed that “information technology” referred to Svartholm’s involvement with The Pirate Bay. However, several sources now dispute this and say that Svartholm’s arrest is related to a hacking operation that may date back to 2010.

The hack targeted Swedish IT company Logica, which supplies services to the Swedish tax office. Earlier this year the hack made the headlines when the tax numbers of 9,000 Swedes leaked online.

In the months that followed two Swedish citizens in their thirties were arrested in connection with the hack. One of the suspects in question was a member of Piratbyran, the group that founded The Pirate Bay back in 2003 and was disbanded two years ago.

Svartholm would be the third suspect in the hacking case, which was previously described by the International Public Prosecution Office as “a big and sensitive investigation.”

A source told TorrentFreak that Svartholm is not awaiting his deportation in prison but is being held at the interior ministry’s counter terrorism department. This is confirmed by former Pirate Bay spokesman Peter Sunde and the sources of Swedish news site DN.se.

On Twitter, Peter Sunde adds that Svartholm (aka Anakata) has not been offered a lawyer, and that the Swedish foreign ministry is not helping the Pirate Bay founder either.

“Swedish foreign ministry has not offered anakata legal help. They must do that in Sweden, but ignore it when they are behind the warrant,” Sunde says.

Svartholm is being held in an office space accompanied by personnel from the interior ministry and is currently awaiting the authorities’ next steps. On Monday, Cambodian officials confirmed that the Pirate Bay founder will eventually be deported.
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Japan's Sony Got Hacked by Null\Crew

Japan's Sony Got Hacked by Null\Crew
Japan's Sony Got Hacked by Null\Crew




Sony said Thursday that hackers stole details belonging to hundreds of its mobile unit clients, the latest in a string of cyber-attacks to hit the embattled Japanese electronics giant.

A group calling itself "Null\Crew" said it had attacked a mobile communications server, with a Sony spokesman confirming the cyber thieves had grabbed information belonging to 400 customers in mainland China and Taiwan.

Null\Crew, which reportedly has links to international computer hacking group Anonymous, posted online usernames, e-mails and some passwords along with a statement critical of the Japanese firm.

"Sony, we are dearly disappointed in your security," it said, adding that it had gained control of eight Sony servers, which could not be immediately confirmed.

"Not even your customers can trust you," it added.

The company spokesman said the incident was being investigated and added that the server with client details belonged to an unnamed "third party", and not Sony itself.

In April last year Sony suffered a massive data breach that compromised more than 100 million accounts and forced it to temporarily halt its PlayStation Network and Qriocity services.

And in October, the firm suspended 93,000 accounts on its online entertainment networks, which let users play videogames and watch movies, after detecting a wave of unauthorized sign-in attempts.

The entertainment giant has been battling to restore consumer trust after the initial security gaffe, with a string of subsequent attacks on websites including in Greece, Thailand and Indonesia.

In another incident, a group of hackers known as LulSec (Lulz Security) in June said they had compromised more than one million passwords, email addresses and other information from SonyPictures.com.
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The Hacker News Official Site Hacked by Shadow008

The Hacker News Official Site Hacked by Shadow008
The Hacker News Official Site Hacked by Shadow008


One of the biggest and popular site The Hacker News (thehackernews.com) just got hacked by a Pakistan Hacker Shadow008. This site was well known for hacking news and also have high Alexa rank.

In the deface page, a brief msg was given to admin that


TheHackerNews b0xed By Shadow008 xD
Also a small message for Admin of TheHackerNews, Why Wont you submit our Pakistani Hackers News When Ever We Submit ? 
Always Be = With Everyone. 
Just like You are with Indian's !




Site :- http://direct.thehackernews.com/

Mirror Link :- http://zone-h.org/mirror/id/18307796
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US cyber police get hacked

US cyber police get hacked
US cyber police get hacked




A HACKER group is claiming to have obtained personal data from 12 million Apple iPhone and iPad users by breaching an FBI computer, raising concerns about government tracking.

The group called AntiSec, linked to the hacking collective known as Anonymous, posted one million Apple user identifiers claimed to be part of a larger group of 12 million, purportedly obtained from an FBI laptop.

Contacted by AFP, FBI spokeswoman Jenny Shearer said: "We're not commenting."

Peter Kruse, an ecrime specialist with CSIS Security Group in Denmark, said on Twitter that the leak "is real" and that he confirmed three of his own devices in the leaked data.

"Also notice that they claim to have full name, addresses, phone numbers etc... Big ouch!" he tweeted.

Eric Hemmendinger, a security expert with Tata Communications, said the report raises concerns about the protectors of cybersecurity.

"The question is not whether it's accurate, it is why did the feds have the information and why did they not take due care to secure it," he told AFP.

Mr Hemmendinger said that based on past reports from Anonymous and related groups, he believes the report is probably true.

"If you work in cybersecurity and your machine gets hacked, that's a pretty embarrassing scenario," he said.

Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Social media and news blogs were aflutter with the news. The tech blog Geekosystem called it "one of the worst privacy disasters yet" and various Twitter comments said the news suggested the FBI is tracking Apple users.

One website set up a database to help users determine if their device was on the hacked list of Apple unique device IDs (UDIDs).

"Quite why the FBI was collecting the UDIDs and personal information of millions of iPhone and iPad users is not yet clear - but it's obvious that the data (and the computer it was apparently stored on) was not adequately secured," said Graham Cluley of the British security firm Sophos.

"My suspicion is that the hackers were more interested in embarrassing the FBI's team than endangering innocent users. All the same, hacking into computers is a criminal act - and I would anticipate that the FBI and other law enforcement agencies will be keen to hunt down those responsible."
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Ministers warn on threat from cyber attacks

Ministers warn on threat from cyber attacks
Ministers warn on threat from cyber attacks




Cabinet ministers will warn FTSE 100 bosses on Wednesday that responsibility must start at board level if they are to counter the growing threat to their operations from cyber attacks.

At a private conference at the Foreign Office in London, company chiefs will be told by Iain Lobban, director of the Government Communications Headquarters, that his organisation sees “credible threats to cyber security of an unprecedented scale, diversity and complexity”.



GCHQ has seen “determined and successful” efforts to steal intellectual property, take commercially sensitive data and exploit information security weaknesses by targeting partners, subsidiaries and supply chains.
In a sign of how seriously the threat is perceived, the event will be attended by chairman and chief executives of FTSE 100 companies in sectors including retail, telecommunications, finance, defence, information technology and energy.
They will be addressed by William Hague, foreign secretary, Vince Cable, business secretary, and David Willetts, the business department minister responsible for cyber security. Sir Michael Rake, chairman of BT, will give a business view.
In advice to be issued to companies, the government cites the case of a UK biotechnology company that was ready for a product launch after five years of research and development costing £1bn.
Eight months before the launch, the research director received an email that appeared to be from a colleague with a PDF of a relevant scientific paper. In fact it was a fake containing malware that enabled an attacker to steal the research.
A foreign competitor was able to release a cheaper version of the product on to the market ahead of the UK company, which lost important contracts and found itself beaten to the market with additional products.
Mr Willetts told the Financial Times that this and other examples were “anonymised and simplified versions of incidents of which GCHQ is aware”.
In June, MI5, the Security Service, warned that a foreign state-sponsored cyber attack against the computer systems of an unnamed big listed British company had cost it £800m in lost potential revenues.
In its guidance to companies, the government will warn that cyber risk must be managed at board level. It urges directors to have a full picture of the damage a company would suffer if sensitive information were stolen or online services disrupted.
For operational managers, it gives advice on issues such as limiting the number of privileged user accounts and how to secure data when staff are working at home or whilst mobile.
Mr Willetts said: “Cyber attack is one of the biggest single threats to British business. It’s a threat to their intellectual property, to the delivery of their services and to personal data they hold.”
He said the conference was an opportunity for senior ministers and the head of GCHQ directly to explain the threat to the heads of British businesses and give practical advice on steps they can take to tackle it.
He added: “I don’t think we have yet reached a stage where it is part of a standard board-level assessment of risks facing a company.”
Mr Lobban said the technical level of attacks was growing exponentially. “What was considered a sophisticated cyber attack only a year ago might now be incorporated into a downloadable and easy to deploy internet application, requiring little or no expertise to use.”

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Aljazeera Official News Website Hacked By Al Rashedon

Aljazeera Official News Website Hacked By Al Rashedon
Aljazeera Official News Website Hacked By Al Rashedon




The official Al Jazeera news site got by a hacker known by Al Rashedon. 

This site was got hacked second time, according zone-h a hacker name The Pro hacked it first time. You can see the mirror here http://zone-h.org/mirror/id/16830944

Mirror Of Al Rashedn http://mirror-ma.com/mirror/id/69289
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Huawei releases whitepaper on cyber security

Huawei releases whitepaper on cyber security
Huawei releases whitepaper on cyber security 




Huawei today released a White Paper on cyber security authored by the company's Global Security Officer, John Suffolk. The document, entitled "Cyber Security Perspectives: 21st century technology and security a difficult marriage," outlines the impact cyber security is having on technology, the global supply chain, and society.

The development of networks enables people from different regions to have more equal opportunities for development, allows different cultures to communicate on a common footing, and advances the progress of human civilization. While we enjoy the conveniences and benefits offered by networks, we also face cyber security challenges, which require governments and the technology industry to drive forward comprehensive and collaborative solutions.

"Network technology is a remarkable innovation. Open networks have encouraged information flow and sharing, provided more opportunities for innovations, lowered the costs of innovation, and have helped improve the world's health, wealth and prosperity," said Suffolk. "This White Paper is a step towards improving industry awareness of Huawei's global efforts in the area of cyber security and presents our view on actions companies and governments need to carry out to manage the global cyber security challenge."

Cyberspace is a new and unfamiliar domain that has gradually become the 'nervous system' through which society operates. In a world where over 87% of the population are mobile users , the stark reality is that cyber security is a growing global challenge demanding rational and universal solutions. As governments, enterprises and consumers have become increasingly reliant on ICT solutions that integrate inputs designed, developed, coded and manufactured by multiple suppliers around the world, the scale of the cyber security challenge has grown exponentially.

As a multinational corporation, protecting the network security of our customers is in line with Huawei's fundamental interests. Huawei has established and implemented an end-to-end global cyber security assurance system that embeds safety into internal procedures. The system has been established and implemented across all business areas, such as corporate policy and management, organizational structure, personnel, and technology to ensure its effective deployment and to build an auditable, sustainable and reliable security system.

As stated in the White Paper, Huawei believes that cyber security is a marathon, not a sprint. All stakeholders governments and industry alike need to recognize that cyber security is a shared global problem requiring risk based approaches, best practices and international cooperation to address the challenge.
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Cyber crime rising, but Allahabad fares well

ALLAHABAD: The men-in-khaki here can a heave a sigh of relief as only five cases under IT Act were registered with the police in Sangam city in year 2011, as per an NCRB report.

Ironically, the state capital has earned an inglorious first position in the KAVAL towns of UP, with 20 cases of cyber crime being registered in 2011. In fact, there has been a 215.6 per cent variation in year 2011 with UP registering a total of 101 cases of cyber crime as compared to 32 cases registered in year 2010.

The records of National Crime Record Bureau (NCRB) states that Sangam city has registered only five cases under IT Act while other KAVAL towns, including Agra, Kanpur and Varanasi registered five, eight and four cases respectively.

As far as Sangam city is concerned, two cases of tampering computer sources/documents and one each case of loss/damage to computer resources/utility, hacking and obscene activity was registered with the police in year 2011.

Records claim that Banglore has topped the chart with highest 117 cases, Vishakhapatnam (107) and Pune (83) ranked second and third respectively, revealed the NCRB report.

A total of 101 offences were registered in UP under the Information Technology (IT) Act, an almost three-fold rise since 2010. Similarly, 13 cases were also registered under different section of IPC during the same period.

Offenders in cyber crime are registered under two heads -- IT Act-2000, and under the Indian Penal Code (IPC). Cyber crimes involving criminal activities that are traditional in nature, such as theft, fraud, forgery, defamation and mischief are registered under the IPC and those that are not document related, including obscene publication, releasing false electronic signatures, unauthorised access and hacking among others are registered under the IT Act, 2000.

Importantly, a total of 123 arrests were made in UP, of which 52 were in the age group of 18 to 30 years, 56 between age 30 and 45 years and 15 people aged between 45 and 60 years on different charges. A total of 32 cases were registered in year 2010 under the IT Act, including those related to hacking, loss or damage to computer resource and for publishing obscene material.

A senior cop preferring anonymity said, "Though cases of cyber crimes did take place earlier also, they are coming to fore more because of increasing awareness created by the police and the presence of cyber crime cell."

He added that the state police have set up a Cyber Complaints Redressal Cell at Agra to lodge grievances of victims.

Experts point out that easy access to broadband/internet connection and increased use of electronic payment systems have led to increase in crime rate. "The number of cases related to documents will go down while crimes like phishing, credit card frauds or unauthorized access will increase since they are more lucrative. Superintendent of police (City) Shailesh Kumar Yadav said: "People are quite aware about frauds on Internet but cops on their part have also been making attempts to spread awareness on the issue so that they could not be cheated."

To create awareness in this connection, the police too are periodically issuing guidelines on cyber safety, including telling the denizens not to give identifying information such as name, home address or telephone number in a chat room. Even vital details like age, gender should never be divulged to anyone, not to send photograph to anyone on the Net unless the person is well enough.

And, more importantly, denizens are being told not to respond to messages or bulletin board items that are obscene, belligerent or threatening. More or less, never go ahead for a face-to-face meeting with anyone who you have just 'met' on the Internet. In case you have to meet this particular person, make sure you have someone with you for the engagement.

Superintendent of police, city, shailesh kumar yadav says " people are quite aware about frauds on internet but cops on their part have also been making attempts to spread awareness on the issue so that they could not be cheated".
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LulzSec hacker arrested over Sony attack

LulzSec LulzSec hacker arrested over Sony attack
LulzSec LulzSec hacker arrested over Sony attack 




A second member of the LulzSec hacking collective has been arrested by US authorities in connection with attacks on Sony Pictures Europe.

US police have arrested Raynaldo Rivera, 20, an alleged member of the hacking group LulzSec, on charges that he took part in an extensive breach of the computer systems belonging to Sony Pictures Europe.

Rivera, of Tempe, Arizona – who allegedly used the online nicknames of "neuron", "royal" and "wildciv" – surrendered to police in Phoenix six days after a federal grand jury in Los Angeles produced an indictment charging him with conspiracy and unauthorised impairment of a protected computer. If convicted, he could face 15 years in prison.

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 indictment says Rivera then helped to post the confidential information onto LulzSec's website and announced the intrusion via the hacking group's Twitter account.

While Rivera was the only person named in the indictment, the FBI said his co-conspirators included Cody Kretsinger, 24, a confessed LulzSec member who pleaded guilty in April to charges stemming from his role in the Sony attack.

Yet the indictment and the arrest still leaves open one of the most puzzling questions left by the hacking spree seen in the first half of 2011, when the hacking collective Anonymous – and LulzSec, which grew out of it, were coming to public attention.

That is the question of who hacked into Sony's PlayStation Network (PSN) system in April.

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.

By contrast the Sony Pictures Europe hack of which Rivera is accused saw the data leaked on 2 June, and LulzSec's activities are generally reckoned to have begun on 30 May with the posting of a fake story about Tupac Shakur to the PBS website.

Following the Sony Pictures Europe breach, LulzSec published the names, birth dates, addresses, emails, phone numbers and passwords of thousands of people who had entered contests promoted by Sony, and publicly boasted of its exploits.

"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).

LulzSec, an underground group also known as Lulz Security, is an offshoot of the international hacking collective Anonymous and took credit for attacks on a number of government and private sector websites, including the UK's Serious Organised Crime Agency, the US Congressional website, and the Sun and News International sites.

The latest indictment says Rivera is suspected of using a proxy server in a bid to conceal his IP address to avoid detection.

Court documents revealed in March that a former Anonymous member known as Sabu, whose real name is Hector Xavier Monsegur, had pleaded guilty to hacking-related charges and had been providing information on his cohorts to the FBI since June 2011, after he was identified as he logged into a public bulletin board from his home address.

That same month, five other suspected leaders of Anonymous, all them alleged to be LulzSec members as well, were charged by US authorities with computer hacking and other offences.

A number of arrests followed in the UK, where six people have been charged with various offences linked to LulzSec's activities.

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.

Kretsinger, who pleaded guilty to the same two charges now facing Rivera, is due to be sentenced on 25 October. A prosecutor said he was likely to receive substantially less than the 15-year maximum prison term carried by those offenses.

Monsegur, 28, a Puerto Rican living in New York, has pleaded guilty to 12 charges, including three of conspiracy to hack into computers, five of hacking, one of hacking for fraudulent purposes, one of conspiracy to commit bank fraud, and one of aggravated identity theft.

Those charges would attract a total of 124 years' jail, but it is thought he has arranged a plea bargain with the US government. Monsegur received a six-month reprieve from sentencing earlier in August in light of his cooperation with the government.

Anonymous and its offshoots focused initially on fighting attempts at internet regulation and the blocking of free illegal downloads but have since taken aim at the Church of Scientology, global banking and other targets.

Anonymous, and LulzSec in particular, became notorious in late 2010 when they launched what they called the first cyberwar in retaliation for attempts to shut down WikiLeaks.

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.
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Two Indian Hackers arrested for hacking cell recharge site

Two Indian Hackers arrested for hacking cell recharge site
Two Indian Hackers arrested for hacking cell recharge site




NOIDA: Two members of the hacker group, "Indishell", and its offshoots were arrested on Saturday after an extensive investigation by the Gautam Budh Nagar cyber crime cell. The accused, who did BTech in computer science, were charged with hacking into an e-commerce website that specializes in mobile recharge. Cops said four members of the gang with pan-India operations were at large.

The hackers have cheated a Delhi-based company of more than Rs 50 lakh, police said. The accused, Sumit Gupta (24) and Ankit Singh (22), are from Moradabad in UP, and are considered one of the "most sophisticated hackers in the country". They were arrested from Noida and booked under Sections 420 of the IPC and 66C of the IT Act, 2008.

"We received a complaint from the head of recharge of Memory Electronics Pvt Ltd about the website being hacked," said Triveni Singh, DSP (cyber crime cell) GB Nagar.

The IP address used by the hackers was located in Sector 62 of Noida. Cops then zeroed in on the duo, allegedly involved in scores of hacking cases. To siphon off the money, the hackers would bypass the cc avenue payment gateway, cops said. "After hacking into the server, the accused obtained administrative rights of the website. when users asked for recharge of their cellphones, DTH cards, net cards, etc, the hackers would just key in the cell number and the amount to be topped up. However, no bill would be generated as the hackers had bypassed the payment page," Triveni said.

"This way the recharge company would be debited every time without a bill, leading to losses worth several lakhs," the DSP said.

The other accused who are yet to be arrested are also BTech graduates from across India. "Shrinivas, facebook name 'neo', is from Kohlapur in Maharashtra; Ajay Dhaka, alias dark look, is from Jaipur; Raman Kumar Rana, facebook name 'google warrior', is a resident of Pathankot; and Manmohan, alias 'mack', is from Muradabad," Triveni said.

"We have found that Shrinivas is the founder and president of a cyber security and anti-hacking organization. But now he is involved in hacking himself and has made a business out of it," Triveni said.
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AMD.COM Got Hacked And Users Leaked - Cyber News


Just a few hours hours before AMD.COM got hacked by a Team known as rootBeerSec.
Still we doesn't know why this was done.

Team rootBeerSec had also leaked the users of AMD from here you can download the users:- http://www.mediafire.com/?g46qskgj17jam2j

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Anonymous Targets Uganda Government Sites In Defense Of Gay Pride, LGBT Rights

Anonymous Targets Uganda Government Sites In Defense Of Gay Pride, LGBT Rights

A well-known group Anonymous has targeted Uganda government websites in response to the nation's repressive stance towards its lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) population.

According to the eSecurity Planet reports, a message posted by Anonymous on the Uganda Prime Minister Amama Mbabazi's website reads as follows:

      "Your violations of the rights of LGBT people have disgusted us. ALL people have the right to live in dignity free from the repression of someone else's political and religious beliefs. You should be PROUD of your LGBT citizens, because they clearly have more balls than you will ever have.
        Real Ugandan Pride is demonstrated in standing up to oppression despite fearing the abuse, torture and murder inflicted on LGBT at the hands of the corrupt government."

        A second message was posted in Pastebin:- You can see it here


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        Cyber War Ends - India and Pakistan

        Cyber War Ends - India and Pakistan


        The Cyber War between India and Pakistan seems to be end, which was running from years to years. Hackers of Pakistan had also announced that "No one will deface Indian Sites

        But some Hacking Community of Pakistan("ZHC") are still defacing Indian sites.

        Overall, wars come to an end because Pakistan said that they had enough, so they said we will not deface, therefore, Indians stopped, let's see what happens next.
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        Hackers Hack Reuters's Webiste



        DUBAI: The blogging platform of the Reuters News website was hacked by an hacker and a false post was posted by them, saying "Saudi Arabia's foreign minister Prince Saud al-Faisal had died". The company said that this was illegally posted on a Reuters journalist's blog.

        Barb Burg, director of global communications at Reuters News, said "Reuters did not report the false story and the post was immediately deleted. We are working to address the problem."

        Reuters had no idea on who was behind the hacking, this was the second time in month that the blogging platform of Reuters.com has been compromised.

        On Aug 3, Reuters was forced to shut the platform temporarily after the appearance of unauthorized, and false, reports citing military reverses for rebels in Syria.

        Two days later, the company suspended the @ReutersTech Twitter account after it appeared to have been seized, renamed and used to send false tweets apparently designed to undermine the Syrian rebels. Still both incidents are under investigation.

        Although the identity of those hackers is not known either, there is an intensifying conflict in cyberspace between supporters and opponents of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Saudi Arabia has emerged as a staunch opponent of Assad.



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