- Mar 8, 2003
- 38,416
- 4
- 0
As many of you know, Lulzsec disbanded recently:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/06/26/us-cybersecurity-lulzsec-idUSTRE75P05I20110626
They are the hacker group responsible for attacks on Sony, AT&T, the US Senate and a host of other corporate and governmental agencies.
But, another hacker group seems to dislike them, so they release their supposed names, addresses and phone numbers after infiltrating them.
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/tec...to-expose-identitites-of-lulzsec-members.html
If this information checks out, it will be a great boon to the feds. The hacker group that acquired the information also claims that Lulzsec did not really have any ideals in mind, just dumped whatever data that could acquire after searching the net for vulnerabilities that they knew how to exploit. Which would seem to explain their seemingly random targets.
Wonder if this might lead to a take down of members of anonymous as well?
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/06/26/us-cybersecurity-lulzsec-idUSTRE75P05I20110626
The Lulz Security group of rogue hackers announced it was disbanding on Saturday with one last data dump, which included internal AOL Inc and AT&T documents.
They are the hacker group responsible for attacks on Sony, AT&T, the US Senate and a host of other corporate and governmental agencies.
But, another hacker group seems to dislike them, so they release their supposed names, addresses and phone numbers after infiltrating them.
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/tec...to-expose-identitites-of-lulzsec-members.html
An Internet hacker group calling itself the A-Team has published a document it claims reveals the identities of at least some members of the recently retired hacker network LulzSec, including phone numbers, addresses, Facebook URLs and even the identities of some of their relatives and associates.
If this information checks out, it will be a great boon to the feds. The hacker group that acquired the information also claims that Lulzsec did not really have any ideals in mind, just dumped whatever data that could acquire after searching the net for vulnerabilities that they knew how to exploit. Which would seem to explain their seemingly random targets.
Wonder if this might lead to a take down of members of anonymous as well?