Date:10/01/12
Online "hacktivist" group Anonymous claimed via Twitter on Christmas Day that it had stolen a trove of emails and credit card information from Stratfor's member subscribers.
According to analysis carried out for the Guardian by John Bumgarner, an expert in cyber-security at the U.S. Cyber Consequences Unit, a research body in Washington, details of senior U.K. intelligence officials and U.S. defense staff were hacked.
In the U.S. case, details of 173 individuals serving in Afghanistan were publicized, along with the personal details of former vice-president Dan Quayle and former secretary of state Henry Kissinger.
Some 221 U.K. military officials and 242 NATO staff were also victims along with advisers to the U.K.'s Joint Intelligence Organisation, a body which reports sensitive information to Prime Minister David Cameron, Bumgarner found.Around 19,000 email addresses belonging to U.S. military personnel were also leaked. Stratfor, which is based in Texas, specializes in foreign affairs and security issues.
The hacked spreadsheets contained email addresses and encrypted passwords of around 850,000 individuals who had subscribed to the consultancy's website.
Over 75,000 subscribers also had their credit card numbers and addresses revealed, the Guardian reported.Experts claim that the encrypted passwords could be cracked quickly using off-the-shelf software.
"We are aware that subscriber details for the Stratfor website have been published in the public domain," a U.K. government spokesman said.
"At present, there is no indication of any threat to UK government systems."
The hackers said they were able to obtain the information in part because Stratfor didn't encrypt it, which could prove a major source of embarrassment to the global intelligence firm.
Anonymous has been involved in scores of hacking exploits, including the recent defacing of a website of Syria's Ministry of Defence to protest a bloody crackdown on anti-government protesters.
Last year, the shadowy group launched retaliatory attacks on companies perceived to be enemies of the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks.
US, UK officials victims of hacking of US security firm Stratfor
Email addresses and passwords belonging to U.K., U.S. and North Atlantic Treaty Organization officials were posted online following the hacking of a U.S. intelligence analysis firm over Christmas, U.K. daily the Guardian reported Monday.Online "hacktivist" group Anonymous claimed via Twitter on Christmas Day that it had stolen a trove of emails and credit card information from Stratfor's member subscribers.
According to analysis carried out for the Guardian by John Bumgarner, an expert in cyber-security at the U.S. Cyber Consequences Unit, a research body in Washington, details of senior U.K. intelligence officials and U.S. defense staff were hacked.
In the U.S. case, details of 173 individuals serving in Afghanistan were publicized, along with the personal details of former vice-president Dan Quayle and former secretary of state Henry Kissinger.
Some 221 U.K. military officials and 242 NATO staff were also victims along with advisers to the U.K.'s Joint Intelligence Organisation, a body which reports sensitive information to Prime Minister David Cameron, Bumgarner found.Around 19,000 email addresses belonging to U.S. military personnel were also leaked. Stratfor, which is based in Texas, specializes in foreign affairs and security issues.
The hacked spreadsheets contained email addresses and encrypted passwords of around 850,000 individuals who had subscribed to the consultancy's website.
Over 75,000 subscribers also had their credit card numbers and addresses revealed, the Guardian reported.Experts claim that the encrypted passwords could be cracked quickly using off-the-shelf software.
"We are aware that subscriber details for the Stratfor website have been published in the public domain," a U.K. government spokesman said.
"At present, there is no indication of any threat to UK government systems."
The hackers said they were able to obtain the information in part because Stratfor didn't encrypt it, which could prove a major source of embarrassment to the global intelligence firm.
Anonymous has been involved in scores of hacking exploits, including the recent defacing of a website of Syria's Ministry of Defence to protest a bloody crackdown on anti-government protesters.
Last year, the shadowy group launched retaliatory attacks on companies perceived to be enemies of the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks.
Views: 775
©ictnews.az. All rights reserved.Similar news
- Cellphone Use May Raise Cancer Risk
- Australian police pushes cyber safety education
- Vietnam aims to lead in e-government
- Senate Website Gets Hacked
- US builds net for cyber war games
- Japan enacts anti-computer virus law
- India passes law vs e-waste
- Anonymous Declares War On The City Of Orlando
- Microsoft highlights evolving dangers as online identity data proliferates
- Consumers want internet security to be provided by banks
- Government facilities targets of cyber attack
- South Korean web attacks might been war drill
- Sri Lanka to Establish National Passport Database to Increase Border Security
- Hi-tech crime agencies set to employ information security professionals
- Phone hacking and online campaign bring down the News of the World