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CYBER WARS
Hackers claim to take down US tear gas maker site
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Feb 14, 2012


The "Anonymous" hacking group on Tuesday claimed to have shut down the website of security firm Combined Systems, which it accused of providing the tear gas used in crackdowns on protests.

The statement circulated in forums used by the shadowy "hacktivist" group could not immediately be confirmed. The Combined Systems website appeared to be down, and the company could not immediately be reached for comment.

"You war profiteering all crazy, selling mad chemical weapons to militaries and cop shops around the world, thinking you will get away unscathed by the rising tides of insurrection?" the statement said.

"Think again... Combined Systems, lay down your arms: you just lost the game."

The statement posted on YourAnonNews -- a Twitter account used by the group -- went on to claim that hackers had taken phone numbers, emails, passwords and other information from Combined Systems employees and clients.

Last week the website of the Central Intelligence Agency was briefly inaccessible after Anonymous claimed to have knocked the US spy agency offline.

In January the group briefly took down the websites of the US Justice Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation in retaliation for the US shutdown of file-sharing website Megaupload.

Most Anonymous cyberattacks are distributed denial of service attacks in which a large number of computers are commanded to simultaneously visit a website, overwhelming its servers.

Nortel was penetrated by hackers for decade: report
New York (AFP) Feb 14, 2012 - Bankrupt Canadian telecom company Nortel was penetrated for at least a decade by hackers believed to have been operating from China, the Wall Street Journal reported Tuesday.

The hackers, using seven passwords stolen from top executives, including the company's CEO, downloaded technical papers, research and development reports, employee emails and other documents, the Journal said.

It cited Brian Shields, a former 19-year veteran of the firm who led an internal investigation, as saying: "They had access to everything... They had plenty of time. All they had to do was figure out what they wanted."

Shields said the hackers also hid spying software so deeply on employee computers that it took the company years to figure out the extent of the problem.

The revelations highlight the threat posed by Chinese hackers, whom US intelligence said were the world's "most active and persistent perpetrators" of economic espionage in a report submitted to the US Congress last November.

The Journal quoted the Chinese embassy as denying allegations of cyberspying, saying such attacks are "transnational and anonymous."

The Journal's story came out hours before Chinese Vice President Xi Jinping -- expected to become China's next president in 2013 -- was to meet US President Barack Obama at the start of a week-long US tour.

Nortel, once Canada's largest company, filed for bankruptcy in 2009.

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Activists Anonymous hack New Zealand FM's email: report
Wellington (AFP) Feb 15, 2012 - Online activist group Anonymous hacked New Zealand Foreign Minister Murray McCully's private email account and used it to send messages mocking him, it was reported Wednesday.

The group breached McCully's email account last April after New Zealand passed laws cracking down on illegal file-sharing and threatening to disconnect repeat offenders from the Internet, the Dominion Post reported.

While the hacked email was a private account, McCully had asked his staff to forward official emails to it, the newspaper reported.

Prime Minister John Key told the Dominion Post that he was aware of the security breach but was confident the hackers had not obtained any sensitive information because if they had "it would be out (on the Internet) by now".

Key said the high-security government email system that ministers use for offical communication had not been compromised.

"They were forwarded on from the official system, but it was not about the ministerial services email system," he said.

McCully declined to provide details of the mocking emails that were sent from his account, saying: "I don't want to give people ideas."

He said he was now more careful about Internet security.

Anonymous briefly knocked down the FBI and US Justice Department websites last month after the founder of file-sharing site Megaupload, Kim Dotcom, and three associates were arrested in New Zealand.

A loose-knit collective of online activists, Anonymous has also claimed credit in recent weeks for disrupting the Central Intelligence Agency and French presidential websites.

It also released a recording earlier this month of a conference call between the FBI and Scotland Yard discussing operations against the hacking collective.



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CYBER WARS
Microsoft India retail site hit by 'cyber attack'
New Delhi (AFP) Feb 13, 2012
Microsoft said Monday it was investigating an attack by hackers on its Indian retail website, reportedly carried out by a Chinese group called the "Evil Shadow Team." The team struck at www.microsoftstore.co.in late Sunday, stealing login IDs and passwords of people who had used the website for buying Microsoft products, the Times of India newspaper said. After hacking the site, the Evil ... read more


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