Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Energy News .




CYBER WARS
13 members of Anonymous indicted on US hacking charges
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 03, 2013


Thirteen alleged members of the loosely organized hacker collective known as Anonymous were indicted Thursday in connection with a series of online attacks on US companies and trade groups.

The indictment unsealed in Alexandria, Virginia, charged the 13 with attacks between September 2010 and January 2011 on the Motion Picture Association of America, Recording Industry Association of America, Visa, Mastercard, Bank of America and others.

The defendants were charged with organizing denial of service attacks aimed at shutting down the websites of the targets known as "Operation Payback."

The targets were chosen for their stand on piracy and copyright enforcement after the discontinuation of Pirate Bay, and the financial institutions later for ending transactions that allowed funds to be raised for Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.

The 13 "planned and executed a coordinated series of cyber-attacks against victim websites by flooding those websites with a huge volume of irrelevant Internet traffic with the intent to make the resources on the websites unavailable to customers and users of those websites," the indictment said.

Those named in the indictment were Dennis Owen Collins, Jeremy Leroy Heller, Chen Zhiwei, Joshua Phy, Ryan Russel Gubele, Robert Audubon Whitfield, Anthony Tadros, Geoffrey Kenneth Commander, Austen Stamm, Timothy Robert McLain, Wade Carl Williams and Thomas Bell.

Anonymous is a loose-knit group hacker activists, or "hacktivists," who have taken credit for scores of online attacks over the past few years.

The attacks range from the nuisance-like -- the FBI and Justice Department websites were back up within a few hours -- to the truly damaging involving the loss of data and the exposure of private financial information.

.


Related Links
Cyberwar - Internet Security News - Systems and Policy Issues






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








CYBER WARS
Silk Road wound through dark side of the Internet
San Francisco (AFP) Oct 03, 2013
There is a dark side to the Internet, and it can be used for evil as well as for good. A massive online bazaar hawking narcotics, weapons, forgeries, and other illicit items or services operated openly for years by relying on tools designed to safeguard privacy or foster a new world of Internet commerce. Underground website Silk Road was seized by US authorities this week and its accused ... read more


CYBER WARS
IEA: Southeast Asia's energy demand to increase 80 percent

Nigeria signs $1.3 bn power plant deal with China

Myanmar's energy sector boosted by World Bank investment

ASEAN region has potential for 70 percent green energy

CYBER WARS
Libya's oil sector faces long-term decline amid anarchy

Slow progress in Israel-Turkey talks threatens gas pipeline plan

US court backs BP in dispute over compensation for oil spill

Russia charges all 30 Greenpeace activists with piracy

CYBER WARS
Installation of the first AREVA turbines at Trianel Windpark Borkum and Global Tech 1

Trump's suit to halt wind farm project to be heard in November

Ireland connects first community-owned wind farm to grid

Moventas significantly expands wind footprint

CYBER WARS
Another 1MW of Community-Owned Solar Comes Online in Colorado

Solid UK performance signals strong future for Trina Solar

Global Solar Installation Growth Set to Hit Three-Year High in 2014

IKEA rolls out consumer solar panel systems in British stores

CYBER WARS
Bangladesh breaks ground for first nuclear power plant

Four tonnes of radioactive water spilled in Fukushima

New leak at crippled Fukushima nuclear plant: TEPCO

Radioactivity found in fracking waste water in Pennsylvania

CYBER WARS
UCLA engineers develop new metabolic pathway to more efficiently convert sugars into biofuels

KAIST announced a novel technology to produce gasoline by a metabolically engineered microorganism

Solving ethanol's corrosion problem may help speed the biofuel to market

First look at complete sorghum genome may usher in new uses for food and fuel

CYBER WARS
Chinese VP stresses peaceful use of space

China's space station to open for foreign peers

Last Days for Tiangong

China civilian technology satellites put into use

CYBER WARS
Climate change: Fast out of the gate, slow to the finish the gate

Climate Models Show Potential 21st Century Temperature and Precipitation Changes

Reconstruction for the eastern Mediterranean temps based on tree rings

Greater desertification control using sand trap simulations




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement