The man named by the FBI as infamous hacktivist Sabu was undone by an embarrassing security blunder, it has emerged.. The alleged LulzSec kingpin eventually copped to a battery of hacking charges last August and was reported to have been "co-operating" with the FBI in the months leading up to yesterday's arrests. Police locked onto Hector Xavier Monsegur, an unemployed 28-year-old from New York The link for this article located at The Register UK is no longer available. . His sudden blunder opened the door for Sabu to agree to work alongside the FBI as they delved into the workings of LulzSec.. LulzSec, Cybercrime, Hacktivism, Identity Exposure, FBI. . Anthony Pell
On Sunday night, cyber vigilantes 'Anonymous' went full throttle against a security firm that claimed to know the identities of the group, which operates "Operation Payback" and reportedly includes members of the "/b/" bulletin board 4chan.org.. The hack exposed Social Security numbers, publicized private e-mails, deleted company files, replaced the phone system, and attacked the LinkedIn accounts of employees at California-based HBGary Federal, a security firm. On Friday Aaron Barr, CEO of HBGary Federal, was quoted in the Financial Times as having identified the founding leaders of Anonymous, which has claimed responsibility for recent distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks on companies that had severed ties with WikiLeaks. Anonymous was also allegedly responsible for shutting down pro-government Web sites in Egypt and Tunisia. Forbes said Barr was planning to sell the information to the FBI. The link for this article located at PC Magazine is no longer available. . Digital rebels named Shadow Syndicate strike at tech conglomerate, revealing confidential information and paralyzing systems in audacious act.. Anonymous Hack,HBGary Federal,Cyber Vigilantes,Digital Security Threats,Operational Security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Web surfers trading free music and other digital goods over one of the Web's most popular file-swapping networks are sharing much more: sensitive data files that could expose them to identity theft. One of several file-swapping networks coat-tailing on Napster's success, . . . . Web surfers trading free music and other digital goods over one of the Web's most popular file-swapping networks are sharing much more: sensitive data files that could expose them to identity theft. One of several file-swapping networks coat-tailing on Napster's success, Gnutella allows people to open the contents of their computers to create a virtual swap meet for MP3s, software, video and text files. A recent casual search of the system revealed scores of files that could compromise the service's users. Putting these would-be file swappers at risk are electronic markers, known as cookies, left automatically on their computers through Netscape or Internet Explorer Web browsers. Web sites place cookies as a way to identify surfers, using them to create personalized Web sites or accounts at shopping sites such as Amazon.com. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . Internet users exchanging complimentary audio files and electronic items could put their personal information at risk due to tracking cookies on BitTorrent.. Data Theft, File Sharing, Online Privacy, Digital Identity, Cookie Risks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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