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Category: WikiLeaks

PBS website hacked, defaced after WikiLeaks documentary evokes online ire

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Updated 1:12 p.m. with PBS response

PBS just learned an unpleasant lesson about what happens when you kick an Internet hornet's nest.

After televising its "Frontline: Wikisecrets" documentary, the public television consortium's site, PBS.org, was hacked into and defaced by a group calling itself LulzSec -- a combination of the word security and the Internet argot for laughs had at another's expense. 

The group hit PBS with a series of embarrassing and potentially damaging payloads, posting graffiti-like Web pages, a fabricated story about rappers Tupac Shakur and Biggie Smalls being alive in New Zealand, and making public a huge cache of phone numbers, logins and passwords apparently of PBS member station websites. The pranksters posted a cached version of the Tupac story, visible here.

PBS acknowledged the attack on Monday, saying it was working to close any remaining security holes, and noting that reader information had not been compromised.

The hacking is the latest in a series of vigilante-type missions from Internet denizens who support WikiLeaks and some of the key players in the story of the leaking site.  One of those is Bradley Manning, a former low-level U.S. Army intelligence analyst who has been charged with unlawfully transmitting tens of thousands of sensitive diplomatic cables to WikiLeaks, and who is now being held in solitary confinement apparently under severe conditions. (According to his attorney, Manning is denied sheets, forbidden to exercise in his cell and not allowed to sleep between 5 a.m. and 8 p.m.)

The PBS attackers, whose messages included "Free Bradley Manning!" appear to disagree with the way Manning was portrayed in the documentary. The show presents a friend of Manning calling him "very depressed," and later notes that "the case presents an important cautionary note to the theory that lower-level analysts like Manning should have access to such a wide range of intelligence."

"Greetings, Internets. We just finished watching WikiSecrets and were less than impressed," the attackers wrote. "We decided to sail our Lulz Boat over to the PBS servers for further ... perusing."

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-- David Sarno

Image: Banner posted by hackers on pbs.org website.

Stephen Colbert takes on HBGary's Anonymous problem

 

If it wasn’t enough for HBGary Federal to be targeted by “hacktivist” organization Anonymous, on Thursday night the Web security firm found itself in Stephen Colbert’s cross hairs.

On "The Colbert Report," the television host tackled the convoluted association of HBGary’s chief executive Aaron Barr with the loose network of hacker activists. 

In what Colbert called a “ripping yarn,” he said that Barr had boasted that he was a “master of counter-hacking” who could take down WikiLeaks and its “albino matchstick” leader Julian Assange.

Colbert said that when Anonymous, which often comes to WikiLeaks’ defense, got wind of Barr’s plan to expose the identities of some of the group’s members, they struck back. The “global hacker nerd brigade” -- his words -- published Barr’s e-mails, wreaked havoc on his Twitter account, remotely wiped his iPad and revealed his World of Warcraft handle.

Now some are wondering whether Colbert -- who asked “how afraid should we be of these Anonymous people ... how powerful are they?” -- is himself a member of the “hornets' nest.”

About three minutes into the clip below, eagle-eyed viewers noticed a flash over Colbert’s face. Upon further examination, it turned out to be the Guy Fawkes mask, the symbol used by Anonymous.

 

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-- Tiffany Hsu [follow]

Tunisia protesters use Facebook, Twitter and YouTube to help organize and report

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Tunisia is in a state of unrest and protesters are using blogs, Facebook, Twitter, WikiLeaks documents, YouTube and other methods to mobilize themselves and report what is going on.

The catalyst for the demonstrations, which have ranged from peaceful protests to violent clashes, was the suicide attempt made by Mohamed Bouazizi, a 26-year-old university graduate in Tunisia who couldn't find work. The North African nation's unemployment rate is about 14%, and about 30% of those without work are between age 15 and 29.

Lf170pnc On Dec. 17, Bouazizi poured fuel on his body and lit himself on fire in the city of Sidi Bouzid in protest of the economic conditions.

Bouazizi died from his injuries Friday morning. He reportedly was his family's only source of income and was unable to provide for his family after police confiscated an unlicensed produce stand he ran.

President Zine el Abidine ben Ali, who had been in power for more than two decades and was a major focus of about four weeks worth of massive demonstrations against widespread unemployment and corruption in the African country, has reportedly fled Tunisia.

Prime Minister Mohammed Ghannouchi   is taking over the president's power on an interim basis.

Reports on how many people have died vary from at least three to as many as 20, and the weeks of demonstrations have been largely ignored by the majority of media outlets until recent days.

As such, the Internet has been the largest source of documentation of the protests, much of it provided  by the demonstrators themselves, despite Tunisia's strict censorship of the Web.

Of course, given the nature of the Internet, information about the protests can range from propaganda to earnest documentation of the reality on the streets, and a critical, skeptical eye is needed to intelligently take in the flood and diversity of reports online.

The blog NDItech DemocracyWorks remarked on the situation, writing that despite remarkable levels of censorship the protesters "have been assisted by external online activists, notably the collective known as Anonymous. Allies of the regime have reportedly engaged equally enthusiastically, utilizing phishing, censoring, and hacking against activists."

NDItech said that social media in particular has been a major battleground between the government and those demonstrating against it.

The Committee to Protect Journalists issued a letter to President Ben Ali last week calling on Tunisia to end its censorship of those covering the unrest.

"Local journalists told CPJ that additional news websites, as well as numerous Facebook pages carrying critical content, blogs, and journalists' e-mail accounts have been blocked by the state-run Tunisian Internet Agency since protests erupted on Dec. 17," the letter said.

"Regional and international media have reported that numerous local and international news websites covering the street protests were blocked in Tunisia. One report placed your country, along with Saudi Arabia, as the worst in the region regarding Internet censorship. A 2009 CPJ study found Tunisia to be one of the 10 worst countries worldwide to be a blogger, in part for the same reasons."

There are also those who have warned about giving the Web and various tech companies too much credit in the situation in Tunisia.

Laila Lalami, a Los Angeles-based writer from Morocco, wrote on Twitter, "Please stop trying to give credit to WikiLeaks, or Twitter, or YouTube for the toppling of Ben Ali. The Tunisian people did it." Later, she tweeted, "The Internet facilitates communication, but it alone doesn't keep people in the streets for four weeks."

Lf16wdnc The "hacktivist" group Anonymous has sided with protesters in Tunisia and posted multiple videos on YouTube about the situation. Some videos contain graphic images of violence in the country that Anonymous says were shared with them by Tunisian demonstrators.

More than 3,000 videos on YouTube have been tagged with the words "Sidi Bouzid," the city where many of the protests have taken place and where Mohamed Bouazizi engulfed himself in flames.

Thousands of tweets have been sent about the protests, so many that "Tunisia" was a trending topic in San Francisco earlier on Friday.

"We might be able to provide thoughtful analysis after all the events of Tunisia unfold. But, right now, along with the rest of the world, we sit back and watch in awe at how people are using Twitter and other platforms to provide on-the-ground perspective during this highly developing and potentially historical moment," said Carolyn Penner, a Twitter spokeswoman. 

According to NDItech, some have estimated that tweets with the hashtag #sidibouzid have been sent out at a rate of about 28,000 per hour since Dec. 27. "It requires careful reading to find informative sources of information and updates," the website wrote about the estimate.

Officials at Facebook and Google (which owns YouTube) were unavailable for comment on Friday.

Another example of demonstrators in Tunisia using the Web to get their messages out is the creation of a website called TuniLeaks, which collects U.S. diplomatic cables published by WikiLeaks that have to do with Tunisia.

Discussions over the cables and what they mean for the nation have taken place at TuniLeaks since it launched in November. The documents include those about human rights violations in Tunisia and censorship of free speech. The site also led to a Twitter hashtag of #tunileaks to identify when tweets referred to the website.

ALSO:

CIA launches WikiLeaks task force, a.k.a. WTF

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-- Nathan Olivarez-Giles

twitter.com/nateog

Top photo: A Tunisian woman waves the national flag in front of the interior ministry during clashes between demonstrators and security forces in Tunis on Friday. Credit: Fethi Belaidi / AFP/Getty Images.

Middle photo: Riot police officers detain a protester during clashes in Tunis on Friday. Credit: Christophe Ena / Associated Press.

Bottom photo: Demonstrators outside the International Court in The Hague take part in a rally Friday to pay tribute to the "blood of the martyrs" and celebrate the departure of Tunisia's President Zine el Abidine ben Ali.  Credit: Robet Vosi / AFP/Getty Images.

CIA launches WikiLeaks task force, a.k.a. WTF

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The CIA has launched a WikiLeaks Task Force, better known by the agency as the acronym: WTF.

According to a report by the Washington Post, the agency has launched the task force to appraise the impact of thousands of sensitive diplomatic documents and military files hitting the web thanks to WikiLeaks. Assange

Among the task force’s responsibilities is “whether the agency's ability to recruit informants could be damaged by declining confidence in the U.S. government's ability to keep secrets,” the report said.

CIA spokesman George Little told the paper that the panel is being led by the CIA's Counterintelligence Center. It is made up of more than two dozen members from departments across the agency.

"It's just a huge vulnerability," an unnamed former high-ranking CIA officer told the Post. "Nobody could carry out enough paper to do what WikiLeaks has done."

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-- W.J. Hennigan

Images, from top: In a photo illustration, a WikiLeaks graphic is displayed on a laptop. Credit: Bebeto Matthews / Associated Press. WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange speaks to the media outside Beccles police station in Suffolk, England, on Dec. 19, 2010. Credit: Paul Hackett / Reuters

Apple pulls WikiLeaks app from iTunes App Store

Julian After just three days on the iTunes App Store, Apple seems to have yanked a $1.99 WikiLeaks app.

The app, which gave users access to documents on the WikiLeaks site and also provided a live feed from the wikileaks Twitter account, became available Friday.

Russian developer Igor Barinov, who claims credit for the app, wrote on his wikileaksapp Twitter profile that it was “removed from sale” Monday night. The app is still available for Android users.

The blogosphere is now buzzing with speculation that Apple’s decision will now make it a prime target for hackers sympathetic to the whistleblower site and its controversial founder, Julian Assange.

Other companies that have cut ties with WikiLeaks -– including Amazon, MasterCard, Bank of America, PayPal and Visa –- have found themselves the target of cyber-attacks.

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Photo: WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange speaks to the media outside Beccles police station in Suffolk, England, on Sunday. Credit: Paul Hackett/Reuters

Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg and WikiLeaks' Julian Assange get the 'SNL' treatment

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, characters that have captivated the tech world in recent weeks, were recently deemed worthy of an even higher honor: being skewered by "Saturday Night Live."

The comics over at "SNL" used part of their Dec. 18 show to jab Zuckerberg, who last week was named Person of the Year by Time magazine.

Starting about 10 minutes in, Andy Samberg plays the young billionaire who dweebishly thanks Facebook users for catapulting him to Time's cover. But soon, the television signal seems to warp, and Samberg/Zuckerberg is replaced by Bill Hader as a bitter Assange.

Sitting in a leather armchair and looking like an evil "Masterpiece Theater" host, faux-Assange whines about being overlooked by the publication. Assange, who is facing allegations of sex crimes, was released on bail last week.

"Time magazine ... Always on the cutting edge," he sneers. "Discovering Facebook only weeks after your grandmother."

[Cue malevolent laughter.]

"I give you private information on corporations for free, and I'm a villain," he continues. "Mark Zuckerberg gives your private information to corporations for money, and he's Man of the Year."

Supporters of Assange's work releasing sensitive documents have harangued Time for bypassing him. Which makes us wonder whether Brad Pitt and George Clooney ever get snippy with each over People’s "Sexiest Man Alive" cover.

 

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Openleaks, a WikiLeaks rival, to launch Monday, report says

  OpenLinkswebsiteFridayDec10Openleaks -- a rival to the secret-document-leaking website WikiLeaks -- is set to launch on Monday, according to a report.

The new site, which will be found at openleaks.org, has "been underway for some time" and was founded by "several key figures" who once worked at WikiLeaks but have resigned in protest of its controversial founder, Julian Assange, according to the Swedish news website DN.se.

Just as WikiLeaks, Openleaks will focus on leaking sensitive documents from governments, corporations, organizations and religious groups to the public, the report said.

"Our long-term goal is to build a strong, transparent platform to support whistleblowers -- both in terms of technology and politics -- while at the same time encouraging others to start similar projects," an anonymous source at Openleaks told DN.se.

"As a short-term goal, this is about completing the technical infrastructure and ensuring that the organization continues to be democratically governed by all its members, rather than limited to one group or individual," the source said, according to the report.

But, unlike WikiLeaks, Openleaks will not publish information it receives on its own, DN.se said.

Instead, other organizations will be given access to documents Openleaks obtains and be responsible for publishing that information, the report said.

The intent is for Openleaks to become a neutral liaison "without a political agenda except from the dissemination of information to the media, the public, non-profit organizations, trade and union organizations and other participating groups," according to DN.se.

"All editorial control and responsibility rests with the publishing organization," an unnamed source told DN.se. "We will, as far as possible, take the role of the messenger between the whistleblower and the organization the whistleblower is trying to cooperate with."

By not publishing the documents itself, Openleaks is hoping to avoid the backlash from global political leaders that WikiLeaks has received.

"As a result of our intention not to publish any document directly and in our own name, we do not expect to experience the kind of political pressure which WikiLeaks is under at this time," a source told DN.se. "In that aspect, it is quite interesting to see how little of politicians' anger seems directed at the newspapers using WikiLeaks sources."

The news of the new website comes as Assange is in custody in Britain on allegations in Sweden that he raped two women.

In the last two weeks, thousands of secret U.S. diplomatic cables have been published by WikiLeaks that have embarrassed and angered global political leaders. The press has labeled the fiasco "cablegate" and WikiLeaks has promised to release thousands more documents.

Last week, anti-WikiLeaks hackers temporarily brought down WikiLeaks' website in response to the release of the government cables.

This week, a group of pro-WikiLeaks hackers, calling themselves Anonymous in a campaign called "Operation: Payback," momentarily disabled the sites of businesses such as MasterCard and Visa that have stopped doing business with WikiLeaks.

Earlier this year, WikiLeaks.org was crashed not by hackers but by WikiLeaks employees, according to DN.se's report.

The move then was a sign telling to Assange to step down by, the report said. Assange didn't, so some of those unhappy at WikiLeaks left and started Openleaks, the report said.

Despite the site being launched as a rival to WikiLeaks, those behind Openleaks told DN.se that the two websites are working toward common goals, although through different methods.

"The two organizations are similar in that aspect that both are focusing on providing means for whistleblowers to anonymously provide the public with information," an insider told DN.se.

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Image: A screenshot of openleaks.org as of Friday.

twitter.com/nateog

WikiLeaks: Amazon U.K. sells parts of diplomatic cables in e-book

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Amazon may no longer be hosting WikiLeaks or its trove of sensitive diplomatic documents, but it is selling excerpts of the cables as a Kindle e-book on its U.K. website.

The cables were self-published by an author listed as Heinz Duthel, according to the Associated Press. It is available for $5.27 to people who are registered to purchase Amazon's Kindle books in the U.K. It is the latest in an ongoing saga between the two firms.  

Last week, Amazon issued a scathing statement about WikiLeaks and said it kicked the company off its servers because it put innocent people in jeopardy.

Amazon is best known as an online bookseller, but the company also has an Internet hosting service, called Amazon Web Services, which enables institutions and individuals to make their websites accessible online.  Logo_aws

The Associated Press said the e-book contains excerpts of WikiLeaks material rather than the entire cables. Amazon added a disclaimer on the the book's page saying:

"This book contains commentary and analysis regarding recent WikiLeaks disclosures, not the original material disclosed via the WikiLeaks website."

Amazon drew fire last month for selling a self-published Kindle e-book that lent advice to pedophiles. After 3,000 comments, customer outrage and threats of boycotts, Amazon.com removed "The Pedophile's Guide to Love and Pleasure" from its listings.

The controversy has raised questions about Amazon's book vetting process and about whether companies such as Amazon -- which traditionally have been thought of simply as tech companies -- should exclude the sale of such books.

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Photo: A computer screen shows Amazon.com. Credit: Karen Bleier / AFP/Getty Images

Sarah Palin says website was attacked in Operation: Payback

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Sarah Palin said her political action committee website and credit card were both hacked earlier today, possibly as a part of Operation: Payback, according to a blog post from ABC News.

Palin told ABC about the cyber attack in an e-mail, blaming hackers from London affiliated with the Operation: Payback campaign in defense of WikiLeaks.

Operation: Payback claimed responsibility for temporarily shutting down the websites of Visa and MasterCard earlier today, as a response to the two credit card companies stopping their acceptance of payments to WikiLeaks after the controversial file-sharing site began releasing secret U.S. diplomatic documents last week.

A group of hackers that is known as Anonymous is behind Operation: Payback, but as of Wednesday evening, the group made no mention of targeting Palin on Twitter or Facebook — their two main venues for claiming responsibility for their attacks.

The group had not responded to Twitter messages regarding Palin's accusations as of Wednesday night.

Palin also told ABC in her e-mail that her husband Todd's credit card had been hacked, too.

"No wonder others are keeping silent about Assange's antics," Palin wrote to ABC, referring to Juilan Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks. "This is what happens when you exercise the First Amendment and speak against his sick, un-American espionage efforts."

The reality TV star, former vice presidential candidate and former governor of Alaska, has criticized Assange on her Facebook page in the past, writing that his "past posting of classified documents revealed the identity of more than 100 Afghan sources to the Taliban. Why was he not pursued with the same urgency we pursue al-Qaeda and Taliban leaders?" ABC reported.

Rebecca Mansour, a spokeswoman for Palin's political action committee, told ABC that Palin had "voiced her opinion knowing full well that she was speaking out against a shady disreputable organization with no regard for laws or human life."

Mansour also told ABC that the cyber attack Palin reported showed the hypocrisy of WikiLeaks' supporters who claim to be "in favor of free speech yet they attack Sarah Palin for exercising her free speech."

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Photo: Sarah Palin signs books inside a Walmart store in Spirit Lake, Iowa, on Thursday, Dec. 2. Credit: AP / John Gaps III

twitter.com/nateog

Operation: Payback's Facebook and Twitter accounts shut down [Updated]

OperationPaybackTwitterSuspended

Operation: Payback, after claiming to have shut down Visa and MasterCard's websites, has been shut down itself -- on Facebook and Twitter, anyway.

Jabbmaade The hacker group Anonymous, which was behind the Operation: Payback campaign against the two credit card companies, used Twitter and Facebook to claim responsibility for users being temporarily unable to access visa.com or mastercard.com at midday Wednesday.

On both social media websites, Anonymous promoted Operation: Payback, stating that it was going to crash both credit card websites because they stopped accepting donations for WikiLeaks. The credit card companies stopped doing business with WikiLeaks after that site began releasing thousands of secret U.S. diplomatic documents.

The group said on both Facebook and Twitter that it was using a distributed denial of service attack, also known as a DDOS attack, to bring the two credit card sites down.

AnnonBack DDOS attacks overload a website's servers by sending an inordinate amount of requests for information that results in a site being unable to operate.

By Wednesday afternoon, Anonymous said on its Twitter account that its Operation: Payback Facebook page had been suspended.

Shortly thereafter, the Operation: Payback Twitter page was suspended, too. But, by about 4:30, Anonymous had launched a new Twitter account.

Twitter officials could not be reached for comment, but Facebook spokesman Andrew Noyes e-mailed this statement:

"We take our Statement of Rights and Responsibilities seriously and react quickly to reports of inappropriate or illegal content and behavior. In this case, we removed a page because it was promoting a DDOS attack.

"Additional point: The WikiLeaks page on Facebook does not violate our policies and remains up. We haven't received any official requests to disable it, nor any notification that the articles posted on the page contain unlawful content."

[Updated 5:15 p.m.: Twitter said in a statement that it does not comment on actions taken against specific user accounts.]

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