Thursday, March 15, 2012

Anonymous Hacker Arrested After British Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS) Hack



According to a news release by Scotland Yard, officers from the Police Central e-Crime Unit (PeCU) arrested the man, who has been linked to the Anonymous hacktivist group, at an address in Wednesbury in the West Midlands. The suspect was a 27 Years old man who has been charged for defacing and hacking into the website of Britain's largest single abortion provider. Official website of The British Pregnancy Advisory Service (BPAS) was compromised yesterday, with a message from a hacker calling themselves "Pablo Escobar". The hacker claimed himself as a part of Anonymous. BPAS claimed that there were "about 26,000 attempts" to break into its website over a six-hour period. 

For a certain period of time yesterday, visitors to the BPAS website saw an anti-abortion message. In a series of tweets, someone using the name "Pablo Escobar" claimed that the names of women who had undergone abortions had been accessed from the BPAS site, and would be released today (Friday). It appears that the authorities moved quickly to reduce the possibility of personal details of people who had contacted the BPAS site being made public.

This month is going worse and worse for Anonymous and their supporters, 1st Operation Unmask by Interpol, then FBI arrested all the key members of Lulzsec with the help of former Anon leader Sabu and so on.

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Interpol #TangoDown, Suspected 25 Anonymous arrested



Interpol’s Web site (www.interpol.int) went down Tuesday just hours after the international police agency announced the arrest of 25 suspected members of the hacking collective Anonymous in Argentina, Chile, Colombia and Spain.

The authorities in Argentina, Chile, Colombia and Spain carried out the arrests and seized 250 items of IT equipment and mobile phones, Interpol says.Those arrested are aged between 17 and 40.

A National Police statement said two servers used by the group in Bulgaria and the Czech Republic had been blocked.It said the four included the alleged manager of Anonymous' computer operations in Spain and Latin America, who was identified only by his initials and the aliases "Thunder" and "Pacotron".

Authorities in Europe, North America and elsewhere have made dozens of arrests, and Anonymous has increasingly attacked law enforcement, military and intelligence-linked targets in retaliation. Earlier this month the group knocked the C.I.A. Web site offline. A week earlier, the group intercepted a conference call between the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Scotland Yard and released a 16-minute recording of the call.

Spanish police traced back IP addresses from server logs, leading to 10 suspects in Argentina, six in Chile and five in Colombia, responsible for defacement of websites and publishing confidential data, including the personal data of the security detail of unnamed top officials, according to Agence France Presse.

The group had set up a chat-room to help run computer attacks in Spain and Latin America.After the arrests, a call went out in chat-rooms affiliated with the suspects for supporters to attack the Spanish police website. The petition specifically asked for people from outside of Spain to carry out the attacks "so that the police would not have enough data to lead to new arrests", according to the statement.

Anonymous has become increasing politicised over the last year, particularly over issues of online rights and the international controversy over whistleblowing website WikiLeaks.