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Monday, May 30, 2011

PBS Hacked by Wikileaks Sympathizers

What we've got here obviously is the second biggest hacking story of the weekend. What's that you say, the other one is complete BS? Oh, so this would be the only hacking story of the weekend, in that case.
A group of Wikileaks sympathizers hacked PBS' website late Sunday and posted a story that slain rapper Tupac Shakur was "alive and well" and living in New Zealand.

The group, identified as LulzSec, also posted passwords and email addresses of PBS staffers to its Twitter page, and taunted the news organization about the security breach.

"Dudes. Of course Tupac is alive. Didn't you see that official @PBS article? Why would they lie to their 750,000+ followers?" the group Tweeted early Monday.

In a statement posted to Twitter, LulzSec said it was upset about PBS' treatment of secret-spiller organization Wikileaks in a recent Frontline documentary called WikiSecrets.

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

Shortly after midnight, the organization began posting links to the fake Tupac story, which said proof that the rapper was alive was found in a dead New Zealand man's diary, as well as dozens of passwords to PBS databases, user logins, a map of the organization's network and other information.

"Anyway, say hello to the insides of the PBS servers, folks. They best watch where they're sailing next time," the group wrote.

PBS quickly picked up on the cyber break-in. One staffer, Teresa Gorman, tweeted furiously starting around midnight to alert PBS readers about the breach.

"Again, the story was added by outside sources-aka hacked, not true," she wrote.

The headline for the Tupac story was still visible on PBS site Monday morning, but clicking on the story brought users to a dead page.
So a major news organization is hacked and still ostensibly under the control of the hackers. Yet Anthony Weiner manages to wrest control of his Twitter account back in a mere four minutes after he was hacked. Sure, that's believable.

2 comments:

  1. Rick de Castro2:12 PM

    Are we sure?  I don't see much difference

    ReplyDelete
  2. Richard Butler8:42 PM

    BFD! So Tupac died when - thirty years ago? His fan base has now moved on to country music and jazz and the current generation doesn't know who the fuck he is/was. Non story so let's move on.

    ReplyDelete

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