Skip to main content

To all,


Just a warning and reminder to everyone to be extra vigilant when using the Internet over the next several days. This includes visits to web sites, as well as email and email attachments.


Cyberwar is underway, because of the arrest of Julian Assange, founder of WikiLeaks. (see the story below)


Several major Internet sites that are now under attack (or probably will be) are:


MasterCard
Amazon
PayPal
eBay


You may have trouble accessing any of these sites (or others). If hackers have started a world-wide denial-of-service attack, those sites will probably collapse, at some point.


I am not going to comment or get into specific reasons in this email as to why these particular companies have been targeted, but if you have been closely following the WikiLeaks debacle in the news during the past several weeks, then you'll know why.


With that said, WATCH your email ATTACHMENTS and pay close attention to the web sites you visit!!!


A reminder that no bank, financial institution, Amazon, eBay, etc., etc., will EVER ask you for sensitive information via email. EVER! Don't ever send your date-of-birth, Social Security number, bank account number(s), PIN, password(s), answer to secret question, mother's maiden name, etc. THROUGH EMAIL. Email is NOT secure.


If you're being asked for any of that information, it's a phishing scam.



December 8, 2010


Cyberattacks Are Retaliation for Pressure on WikiLeaks
By RAVI SOMAIYA

LONDON — A broad campaign of cyberattacks appeared to be under way on Wednesday in support of the beleaguered antisecrecy organization WikiLeaks, which has drawn governmental criticism from around the globe for its release of classified American documents and whose founder, Julian Assange, is being held in Britain on accusations of rape.
Attacks were reported on Mastercard.com, which stopped processing donations for WikiLeaks; on the lawyer representing the two Swedish women who have accused Mr. Assange of sexual improprieties; and on PostFinance, the Swiss postal system’s financial arm, which closed Mr. Assange’s account after saying he provided false information by saying that he resided in Switzerland.

At least some of the attacks involved distributed denials of service, in which a site is bombarded by requests from a network of computers until it reaches capacity and, effectively, shuts down.

It was unclear whether the various attacks were independently mounted, but suspicion was immediately focused on Anonymous, a leaderless group of activist hackers that had vowed to wreak revenge on any organization that lined up against WikiLeaks and that claimed responsibility for the Mastercard attack.
The group, which gained notoriety for their cyberattacks on targets as diverse as the Church of Scientology and the rock musician Gene Simmons, released two manifestos over the weekend vowing revenge against enemies of WikiLeaks.

“We fight for the same reasons,” said one. “We want transparency and we counter censorship.”
The manifestos singled out companies like PayPal and Amazon, who had cut off service to WikiLeaks after the organization’s recent release of classified diplomatic documents from a cache of 250,000 it had obtained.

In recent days, Gregg Housh, an activist who has worked on previous Anonymous campaigns, said that a core of 100 or so devout members of the group, supplemented by one or two extremely expert hackers, were likely to do most of the damage. Mr. Housh, who disavows any illegal activity himself, said the reason Anonymous had declared its campaign was amazingly simple. Anonymous believes that “information should be free, and the Internet should be free,” he said,
Mr. Assange was jailed in Britain on Tuesday after being denied bail in a London court hearing on a warrant for his extradition to Sweden to face accusations of sexual offenses. On the courthouse steps, his lawyer, Mark Stephens, told reporters that support shown for Mr. Assange and WikiLeaks so far was “the tip of the iceberg.”

In words that now seem prophetic, he added that the battle for WikiLeaks and its founder’s future was “going to go viral.”
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

I totally agree that everyone should always be vigilant about giving out their information thru email or clicking links in email that purports to lead to their financial institution.

I also agree that people are launching cyber-attacks against wikileaks and other people are launching retaliatory attacks against anti-wikileaks people.

However, the two things are unrelated. Unless you happen to be an outspoken critic of wikileaks or you recently pulled your support from them (like Amazon, Paypal, etc.), there is no reason to think there would be an increase in your personal security threat level.
Agreed JasonR.

Also, which of the following do you believe to be more likely:

1. Hacker compromises on-line data security, obtains your encrypted financial information, and decrypts it.

2. Bad guy walks up to your house, opens your external unlocked phone demarc box, plugs a $20 phone into the service jack and listens while you order a pizza from Domino's via credit card?

3. Bad guy at restaurant walks up and says "I hope you enjoyed your evening" while placing the bill on the table. Walks away with the bill and your credit card, takes a cellphone photo of the front and back before he returns.

Here's a hint... reading paragraph #2 and #3 tells you everything you need to know in order to successfully obtain your credit card information. Paragraph #1 barely gets you started on the books you'll need to read in order to begin attempting to pull it off.
quote:
Originally posted by CashGap:
Agreed JasonR.

Also, which of the following do you believe to be more likely:

1. Hacker compromises on-line data security, obtains your encrypted financial information, and decrypts it.

2. Bad guy walks up to your house, opens your external unlocked phone demarc box, plugs a $20 phone into the service jack and listens while you order a pizza from Domino's via credit card?

3. Bad guy at restaurant walks up and says "I hope you enjoyed your evening" while placing the bill on the table. Walks away with the bill and your credit card, takes a cellphone photo of the front and back before he returns.

Here's a hint... reading paragraph #2 and #3 tells you everything you need to know in order to successfully obtain your credit card information. Paragraph #1 barely gets you started on the books you'll need to read in order to begin attempting to pull it off.



Whoa!! 2 & 3 never, ever even thought about that twice. Taking a picture of the credit cards, rotten bastards.
quote:
Whoa!! 2 & 3 never, ever even thought about that twice. Taking a picture of the credit cards, rotten bastards.


Nah Art, why take a picture of the credit card when they could just study ethernet protocols for a decade.

If they know you are having a good evening, they probably have time to walk to the store next door and buy something before they bring back your card!!!

But folks would prefer to be terrified at the idea of a nasty hacker skimming data off the innertubes.

Similar to folks reacting to a 70 fatality commercial airline crash every three to five years, while shrugging off 92 US traffic fatalities per day.

Add Reply

Post
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×