Hackers affiliated with the “AntiSec” movement claim to have breached security systems of the North American Treaty Organization (NATO), and stolen “about one gigabyte” of restricted data, according to a post on the @AnonymousIRC Twitter feed. The AntiSec hackers include members of the two most notorious groups on the scene: Anonymous and Lulz Security (LulzSec).
>> AUTHOR: deepquest
LulzSec, also known as Lulz Security, is an anonymous hacker group that has broken into the website for The Sun newspaper. British daily newspaper The Sun is owned by media mogul Rupert Murdoch, who is involved in a wide-ranging phone hacking scandal, reports The Vancouver Sun. The first attack came on Monday afternoon, after the hackers redirected visitors to thesun.co.uk to a fake report of …
News International pulled down the main Times and Sun websites yesterday after a fake ‘Murdoch dead’ news story was been placed on the Sun website after a hack by Lulz Security.
The activist hacker group Lulz Security, which announced its retirement in June, resurfaced Monday evening with media mogul Rupert Murdoch as its latest target.
Websites for two News Corp newspapers, theSunand theTimes, have suffered an Internet attack.
Lulz Security hacker group has attacked the website of the Rupert Murdoch owned Sun newspaper.
Websites owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News International were down early Tuesday after the Lulz Security hacker group replaced The Sun’s online version with a fake story pronouncing the mogul’s death.
Lulz Security cyber assault tops The Sun’s website with a fictional story of the media mogul’s death.
A group of computer hackers calling themselves Lulz Security tamper with the website of News International-owned the Sun’s website.
As of about 6:30 p.m. New York time, visitors to the Sun’s home page at thesun.co.uk were redirected to the Twitter feed for Lulz Security, or LulzSec, a hacking collective that said it had disbanded late last month. The rerouting has since stopped, and the Sun’s Web page was down after 9 p.m.