Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Hackers Assault US Counterclaim Group

Hacker organisation Anonymous has expelled a cache of information it claims to have stolen from US counterclaim expert Booz Allen Hamilton.

A record containing more than 90,000 e-mail addresses in addition to passwords, logins and other information was put on The Pirate Bay file-sharing site.

The organisation mentioned it stole the information by targeting a feeble stable server on the counterclaim firm's network.

Booz Allen Hamilton declined to criticism on the incident.

In content combining the download package, Anonymous mentioned it was "surprised" at how easy it was to penetrate the server since the consulting firm's record of working on counterclaim and homeland security.

The assault was carried out beneath the ensign of the "Anti Sec" promotion that was originated by the ephemeral LulzSec hacking group.

That hacker combined "disbanded" in late June subsequent to a debauch of hack attacks on high form targets. Many of its members are think to have assimilated up with Anonymous.

As good as grabbing e-mails, passwords and a duplicate of a database, Anonymous mentioned it had moreover got grip of lots of other element that it programmed to use to assault other supervision agencies and sovereign contractors.

Booz Allen told Reuters it had no criticism to make about the purported attack, adding that firm process meant it could not confer "specific threats or activities taken against the systems".

Commenting on the attack, Chester Wisniewski from safety firm Sophos , mentioned the attack's stress may distortion in what happens to the addresses right away they have been stolen.

"...there evidently is urge for information about people connected to the US counterclaim that may be used to negotiate their accounts and computers," he wrote.

The Anonymous hacking organisation came to inflection interjection to the activities it took in counterclaim of the Wikileaks whistle-blowing website. Among other things, Anonymous helped to prepare attacks on companies, inclusive Mastercard and Amazon, that it felt did not do sufficient to help Wikileaks.

The ultimate assault follows new raids by military forces in Spain, Turkey and Italy that resulted in the detain of suspected members of Anonymous.

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