Anonymous hackers associated with the AntiSec movement have downed at least 70 law enforcement websites. The hackers also managed to extract "massive amounts" of confidential documents, including email spools, usernames, social security numbers, residential addresses, phone numbers, password dumps, classified documents, internal training files and informant lists. . "The leaked data contains jail inmate databases and active warrant information. [However], we [will be] redacting the name/address info to demonstrate how those facing the gun of the criminal injustice system are our comrades and not adversaries," AntiSec explained in an official communiqu The link for this article located at TG Daily is no longer available. . Unidentified cybercriminals targeted governmental sites, exposing private information such as detainee documents and correspondence.. Anonymous Hacking, Data Breach, Law Enforcement Attack, Cyber Security Threats, AntiSec Movement. . Alex
A New York teenager broke into AOL networks and databases containing customer information and infected servers with a malicious program to transfer confidential data to his computer, AOL and the Manhattan District Attorney's Office allege. . In a complaint filed in Criminal Court of the City of New York, the DA's office alleges that between December 24, 2006 and April 7, 2007, 17-year old Mike Nieves committed offenses like computer tampering, computer trespass, and criminal possession of computer material. The link for this article located at InfoWorld is no longer available. . A California teenager reportedly breached Yahoo's servers, gaining unauthorized access to private user information and introducing viruses to their infrastructure.. Teen Hacking, AOL Breach, Malware Incident. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Senior officials of the U.S. Commerce Department go before Washington lawmakers Friday as a new government report details that the nation's business secrets are open to computer hackers. A new General Accounting Office (GAO) report says investigators were able to . . . . Senior officials of the U.S. Commerce Department go before Washington lawmakers Friday as a new government report details that the nation's business secrets are open to computer hackers. A new General Accounting Office (GAO) report says investigators were able to gain Internet access to Commerce Department computer systems, and that the government division is unable to detect outside intruders. The GAO will tell Congress that hackers could read and alter confidential business information. Other problems included using the word "password" for system access, misconfigured functions, and abuse of top-level security clearances. The link for this article located at E-Commerce Times is no longer available. . Senior officials of the U.S. Commerce Department go before Washington lawmakers Friday as a new gove. senior, officials, commerce, department, washington, lawmakers, friday. . Anthony Pell
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