Activists from the hacker group 'Anonymous' blocked access to Russian President Vladimir Putin's website for several minutes on Wednesday, Reuters reports.. Internet users in Russia were unable to access the www.kremlin.ru web site for several minutes, the report said. "Anonymous shuts down Kremlin's websites," the hacker group boasted on its "Op_Russia" Twitter account, "kremlin.ru - TANGO DOWN." The link for this article located at Fox News is no longer available. . The official Kremlin website experienced a temporary outage due to the actions of Anonymous hackers, igniting discussions about the rise of cybersecurity activism.. Anonymous Hackers,Cyber Disruption,Kremlin Website Attack. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A number of Congressional websites were defaced with abuse aimed at President Obama following Wednesday's State of the Union address. Websites maintained by Congressmen including Charles Gonzalez (Texas), Spencer Bachus (Alabama) and Brian Baird (Washington) were replaced with a one-line abusive message aimed at Obama by the "Red Eye Crew" from Brazil in the early hours of Thursday morning.. The affected sites are all hosted on the house.gov domain, but only a minority of sites resident on the domain were hacked to display digital graffiti. Some Congressional committee websites were also affected. At least some of the affected sites remain defaced on Thursday morning. A full list of affected sites and additional commentary on the mass defacement can be found in a post by security blogger Praetorian Prefect here. The link for this article located at The Register is no longer available. . Legislative portals encountered tampering filled with hostile remarks following the Presidential Address, indicating a politically motivated breach.. Congressional Websites, Cybersecurity Attack, Digital Graffiti, Hacking Incident. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Visitors to SCO's website this morning were treated to a rare moment of corporate self-awareness after hackers apparently replaced an image linking to the undoubtedly scintillating "Extending Legacy Applications and Databases to the Web and Wireless Devices with SCOx Web Services Substrate" with a graphic bearing the rather more promising "We own all your code - pay us all your money": . Visitors to SCO's website this morning were treated to a rare moment of corporate self-awareness after hackers apparently replaced an image linking to the undoubtedly scintillating "Extending Legacy Applications and Databases to the Web and Wireless Devices with SCOx Web Services Substrate" with a graphic bearing the rather more promising "We own all your code - pay us all your money": Naturally, we at El Reg cannot condone such behaviour and hope that the ne'er-do-well behind this piece of waggery is suitably ashamed of himself. We await his arrest and long imprisonment with eager anticipation, and if the authorities would like a clue in tracking down the culprit, they should look at what the young lady is writing on the board. The link for this article located at theregister.co.uk is no longer available. . Visitors to SCO's website this morning were treated to a rare moment of corporate self-awareness aft. visitors, sco's, website, morning, treated, moment, corporate, self-awareness. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The Electrohippies take on Cult of the Dead Cow in hacking legitimacy dispute A row has broken out between UK Internet activists, the Electrohippies, and US ethical hacking group, Cult of the Dead Cow, over whether Denial of . . . . The Electrohippies take on Cult of the Dead Cow in hacking legitimacy dispute A row has broken out between UK Internet activists, the Electrohippies, and US ethical hacking group, Cult of the Dead Cow, over whether Denial of Service attacks are a legitimate form of Internet activism. The Electrohippies have published a report that claims the recent attacks were a statement against the commercial development of the Internet, and suggests this technique should be developed as a legitimate form of protest on the Net. "Recent actions on the Internet against e-commerce sites are not a matter of pleasure seeking by bored computer nerds," reads the Electrohippies' message. "They represent a fundamental disagreement about the purposes of the Internet, and the increasing emphasis on the use of the Net as a vehicle for profitable trade, rather than of knowledge and discussion." The link for this article located at ZDNet UK is no longer available. . The Electrohippies take on Cult of the Dead Cow in hacking legitimacy dispute A row has broken out b. electrohippies, hacking, legitimacy, dispute, broken. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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