Anonymous claims another attack on CIA website
Issues with the website were not confirmed by the CIA, and it remains unclear exactly what was responsible for the problem.
Issues with the website were not confirmed by the CIA, and it remains unclear exactly what was responsible for the problem.
Anonymous defended WikiLeaks when it was facing a funding cutoff, but the release of the Stratfor emails appears to be the first direct collaboration between the hackers and the anti-secrecy site.
Even with founder Julian Assange under house arrest in Britain, WikiLeaks's engines are set to “full steam ahead.” And the whistleblowing organization has a new partner: Anonymous.
Cyber rebels from Anonymous announced Friday the group has carried out a new series of attacks against U.S. government websites to protest a global copyright treaty.
The hacking group known as Anonymous has claimed a new series of hacks against the U.S. Federal Trade Commission and consumer rights websites.
The Central Intelligence Agency's website CIA.gov is unresponsive in what looks a lot like a denial of service attack, but it's a bit too early to blame it on Anonymous, which usually likes to loudly take credit for these kinds of things. Of the key Twitter accounts that usually tout successful hacks by the loose-knit hacking network, none directly took credit for the website take-down …
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