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Author Topic: Chinese Hackers Poised for Anti-CNN Attack  (Read 6413 times)

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Samker

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Chinese Hackers Poised for Anti-CNN Attack
« on: 18. April 2008., 16:45:37 »


Chinese hackers appear to be readying for an attack on the West scheduled for April 19. It appears the basis of the attack is based on the recent, and very public, pro-Tibet coverage in Western media organizations.

A Chinese site called Anti-CNN is setting out to counteract what it claims are the lies and distortion present in Western news coverage of stories concerning China and Chinese national interests. It is calling for street protests in Germany, France, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom on April 19 (Beijing local time).

So far it is nothing more than Anonymous has done in its efforts to protest against Scientology, but nationalistic Chinese hackers have issued a call for a distributed denial of service attack against CNN to coincide with the street protests.

While there is no apparent link between Anti-CNN and the hackers calling for the denial of service attack, the team at The Dark Visitor, who have been tracking Chinese hacking activity for some time, believe that it may be members of the Red Hacker Alliance that are pushing for the online attack to accompany the physical demonstrations.

According to Scott Henderson, administrator for The Dark Visitor, members of The Red Alliance have traditionally required very little in terms of direct motivation to launch politically-motivated attacks against external sites. The Dark Visitor researchers have associated politically motivated attacks from this group against sites in the United States, Japan, Taiwan, and Indonesia.

With increasing public argument in the West about how to approach attendance at the Olympic Games being held in Beijing in August, and with continued coverage of social and political unrest in sensitive Chinese territories, more and more Western sites are going to gain the attention of China-based hacking groups like the Red Hacker Alliance.

As the Estonia attacks from 2007 demonstrate, it doesn't take many people to carry out a crippling attack against Internet infrastructure or sites.

There will be a number of interested observers watching on April 19, to see whether The Red Alliance have the capability to back up the claims they are making and what sort of effect they are actually going to have against a high-traffic media site.

(Copyright by PC World)


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Chinese Hackers Poised for Anti-CNN Attack
« on: 18. April 2008., 16:45:37 »

Samker

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Hackers Cancel Attack on CNN
« Reply #1 on: 20. April 2008., 08:53:04 »
A planned cyberattack against CNN's Web site fizzled out Saturday as the group backing the event called it off.

"Our original plan for 19 April has been canceled because too many people are aware of it and the situation is chaotic," wrote a group called "Revenge of the Flame," according to a translation posted on the Dark Visitor Blog. "At an unspecified date in the near future, we will launch the attack."

Pro-China hackers had called for the attack in protest of the news network's coverage of Tibet, which they believe has been overly critical of China. Participants had been instructed to flood CNN's Web site with Internet traffic in hopes of knocking it offline, something known as a distributed denial of service (DDOS) attack.
Early Harassment

Some had begun hitting the site ahead of the April 19 attack date.

On Friday CNN reported that it had been attacked Thursday causing the site "to be slow or unavailable to some users in limited areas of Asia." The net effect of the attack was "imperceptible," CNN said.

Network monitoring company Arbor Networks observed that www3.cnn.com was hit with a minor 14-MB-per-second attack that lasted about 21 minutes, according to Danny McPherson, the company's chief research officer.

(Copyright by PC World)

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Hackers Cancel Attack on CNN
« Reply #1 on: 20. April 2008., 08:53:04 »

 

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