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    Hacker group Anonymous denies Sony attack

    Shu
    Shu
    Celestial Council
    Celestial Council


    Male
    Number of posts : 10794
    Location : Singapore
    IGN[Game NickName] : Ashura/Iori Yagami
    Current Status : Busy at Work
    Registration date : 2008-03-31

    Hacker group Anonymous denies Sony attack Empty Hacker group Anonymous denies Sony attack

    Post by Shu Sun May 08, 2011 10:16 am

    Hacker group Anonymous denies Sony attack










    Hacker group Anonymous denies Sony attack _52568866_ps


    More than a million users have been affected by the security breach




    Online
    vigilante group Anonymous has denied being behind an attack that led to
    the theft of personal data from around 77 million PlayStation users.



    The secretive "hacker collective" had earlier been singled-out by Sony as the possible guilty party.
    But a posting on Anonymous' blog said: "Let's be clear, we are legion, but it wasn't us. You are incompetent Sony."

    The electronics giant has offered compensation to users who suffer fraud as a result of the theft.
    Earlier this week, Sony sent a letter to the US Congress accusing Anonymous of being involved in the attack.

    "Sony has been the victim of a very carefully planned, very
    professional, highly sophisticated criminal cyber attack," said the
    letter, signed by Sony America boss Kazuo Hirai.


    He said that Sony had found a file planted on its network labelled "Anonymous" and bearing the group's slogan, "We are legion".

    But Anonymous said that it had been framed by online thieves to throw law enforcement off track.


    “Start Quote



    Whoever broke into Sony's servers... clearly wanted Anonymous to be blamed for the most significant digital theft in history”


    Anonymous' statement




    The group, which made headlines
    in December 2010 after it used software freely available over the
    internet to temporarily bring down the sites of MasterCard and Visa,
    said that its members were not credit card thieves.
    "Whoever broke into Sony's servers to steal the credit card
    info and left a document blaming Anonymous clearly wanted Anonymous to
    be blamed for the most significant digital theft in history," the statement read.

    Revenge attack

    According to Sony, the group targeted the company and
    facilitated the hacking in retaliation for the electronics giant's
    recent legal action against George Hotz.

    The US-based hacker was accused of breaking copyright laws by
    devising a way to change the operating system on Sony PlayStations.

    The case was eventually settled after Mr Hotz agreed not to repeat such behaviour in future.
    Sony claimed that the massive data theft also coincided with a
    distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack on its website by
    Anonymous.


    Hacker group Anonymous denies Sony attack _52569952_ps4



    Kazuo Hirai, Sony America boss, said the company found a file on its network labelled "Anonymous"


    Denial-of-service attacks take servers down by overwhelming them with traffic.

    But Anonymous denies all responsibility for allowing access to online gamers' data, including millions of credit card numbers.

    "No one who is actually associated with our movement would do
    something that would prompt a massive law enforcement response," said
    the group's statement.

    "On the other hand, a group of standard online thieves would
    have every reason to frame Anonymous in order to put law enforcement off
    the track."

    Apologies and compensation
    Meanwhile, Sony's CEO Sir Howard Stringer has apologised for the first time to all those affected by the security breach.“Start Quote



    To date, there is no confirmed evidence any credit card or personal information has been misused”

    Sir Howard Stringer Sony's CEO




    In a blog post on the
    PlayStation website, he wrote that the company was working on
    heightening security measures to "protect your information better than
    ever".

    He also offered compensation to US PlayStation Network and
    Qriocity users in the form of a year-long free enrolment in an identity
    protection programme.


    The programme includes a $1m (£608,000) identity theft
    insurance policy for each user, should they become victims of any future
    cyber-attacks.

    In a bid to reassure Sony's customers and regain their trust,
    Mr Stringer added that "to date, there is no confirmed evidence any
    credit card or personal information has been misused, and we continue to
    monitor the situation closely."

    Many PlayStation Network users have been upset about the
    company taking two days after discovering the theft before contacting
    law enforcement and almost a week to inform the people affected by the
    breach, after it was first discovered on 20 April.


    Targeting Viacom

    Hacker group Anonymous denies Sony attack _52568870_viacom


    Anonymous has issued a warning to Viacom



    After publishing its statement regarding Sony,
    Anonymous also issued a warning to entertainment giant Viacom.
    The group said that because of Viacom, "thousands of people
    have undergone the unfortunate experience of receiving falsely-claimed
    copyright infringements".


    Viacom is known for taking aggressive legal action to get its content removed from video sharing websites.

    In 2007, the company attempted to sue YouTube for $1bn (£608m).
    As part of its counter-action, YouTube's parent company
    Google accused Viacom of uploading some videos itself and manipulating
    them to look like amateur copies.

    The case against YouTube was eventually thrown out.

    In its statement, Anonymous wrote: "Anonymous demands from
    Viacom a public press release to admit and apologise for the fraud and
    crimes that they have committed.

    "Anonymous also demands that Viacom allows everyone throughout the internet full rights to be able to express themselves.


    "Lastly, we, the citizens of the world, demand that Viacom
    stops their attempts to gather personally identifying information such
    as IPs, which are of no relevance to them."

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