WebProNews

Tag: Sabu

  • Anonymous Timeline Alleges #AntiSec an FBI Creation

    Affiliates of the Anonymous movement are no stranger to FBI infiltration. Now, however, the hackers and their supporters are wondering if the #AntiSec group was not only infiltrated by federal investigators, but whether the group was itself a creation of the FBI, intended as a honeypot to attract the movement’s top hackers.

    Anonymous PR Wing @YourAnonNews announced its suspicions on Twitter last night. If there’s anything to their claims, this is some serious spy-versus-spy stuff:

    Get out your tinfoil hat folks, shit is about to get REALLY fucked up around here. Stay tuned for revelations. 12 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    #Antisec © FBI 2011-2012. (they manufactured terror, from the start) 12 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    We hope when all is said and done, you can look at the facts as we lay them out and connect the dots to reach the same conclusions we did. 8 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Was #ANTISEC itself a FBI-created honeypot tailored to attract the top #Anonymous hackers? Was the FBI thus complicit in all #ANTISEC hacks? 6 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Earlier today the group published this timeline of #AntiSec, highlighting perceived correlations between LulzSec leader Sabu’s (Hector Xavier Monsegur) arrest and legal proceedings, his acquisition and sharing of security data with Anonymous affiliates, the formation of #AntiSec, and last week’s arrest of five suspected hackers.

    Timeline of ANTISEC as Created and Operated Under FBI Supervision

    #AntiSec was first announced on Twitter, the timeline asserts, at nearly the same time that Sabu was arrested

    The same day, an #AntiSec release statement was posted on pastebin, encouraging widespread advertising the of “AntiSec” brand on both the digital and physical landscape:

      Welcome to Operation Anti-Security (#AntiSec) – we encourage any vessel, large or small, to open fire on any government or agency that crosses their path. We fully endorse the flaunting of the word “AntiSec” on any government website defacement or physical graffiti art. We encourage you to spread the word of AntiSec far and wide, for it will be remembered. To increase efforts, we are now teaming up with the Anonymous collective and all affiliated battleships.

    And a specific call was made to acquire sensitive government information:

      Top priority is to steal and leak any classified government information, including email spools and documentation. Prime targets are banks and other high-ranking establishments.

    A week later, LulzSec announced its disbandment and Sabu announced his allegience to #AntiSec.

    YourAnonNews cites these correlations as evidence that #AntiSec was formed by Sabu after his turning federal informant, and thus that #AntiSec was a creation of the U.S. Government. You can examine the rest of the alleged evidence for yourself in the pages above.

    While it will be nearly impossible to verify the validity of this timeline (and thus, the culpability of federal investigators in instigating #AntiSec and its attacks), the above timeline at least makes for some interesting reading with even more interesting implications (provided it’s accurate). If #AntiSec was a government creation, then that would make federal authorities at least marginally culpable for attacks carried out under the #AntiSec banner, especially any attacks that were instigated by their informant, or that were the result of information leaked by authorities. With strong enough evidence, this could even be a case for entrapment in the defense trials of alleged hackers recently arrested for #AntiSec-related crimes. Again, however, to prove such direct culpability of federal investigators would be a herculean task.

    FBI involvement or no, the #AntiSec banner has grown far beyond the control of its creators, whoever they may be. But my head is spinning. I’m going to go write about something simple for a while.

    YourAnonNews also published a 506-page pdf archive of all of Sabu’s tweets since November 2011. While we didn’t include it in this post, you can peruse it here if you’re feeling nosy.

  • Anonymous Hacks Vatican Again

    Anonymous Hacks Vatican Again

    The Vatican has declared it has been infiltrated by hacker group Anonymous for the second time, shortly after 2pm on Monday. A Vatican spokesperson downplayed the incident, stating that “there was a second attack we are aware of directed against the [Vatican IP] address concerning Vatican Radio, a database on an old server was accessed. Thirty percent of the information on the server was so outdated it was of no use.”

    (image)

    AnonOps Communications, a mouthpiece of the hacker group collective, took to Pastebin, called the Vatican “repeaters with power transmission largely outside the bounds of the law,” and claimed responsibility for the attack.

    Anonymous just last week took down the Vatican’s website, in protest of the Roman Catholic Church, and accused the organization of having played “a significant role in helping Nazi war criminals find refuge in foreign countries and to evade international justice,” amongst other things.

    This first hack of the Vatican came on the day after the LulzSec arrests, to where prominent LulzSec hacker ‘Sabu’, a.k.a Hector Xavier Monsegur, was exposed as an FBI informant.

  • ‘Anonymous’ Takes Down Vatican’s Website

    Hackers from an Italian cell of the group ‘Anonymous’ took the Vatican’s website offline. At writing, vatican.va is still offline, though Vatican officials are working to fix this. Anonymous claims to seek to punish “the corrupt Roman Catholic Church and all of its emanations.”

    anonymous

    Anonymous’ Italian website states that “today to besiege your site in response to the doctrine, to the liturgies, to the absurd and anachronistic concepts that your for-profit organisation spreads around the world.” Anonymous also denounced Catholic stances on abortion and contraception and called attention to its sex-abuse scandal, and accused the Vatican of being “retrograde” in “daily” interference in Italian domestic affairs. The wealth of the Catholic church was also mentioned, as well as the pointing out that it is a “for-profit” organization. Anonymous also made it clear that it was just attacking the Catholic Church as a business, and “is not against the Christian religion or the faithful around the world but against the corrupt Roman Apostolic Church.”

    Father Federico Lombardi, the director of the Vatican press office, was not sure how long the site would be down.

    Anonymous had recently declared war on organized religion in general, has also been in the news after some of their affiliates were arrested after being ratted out by one of their own, the hacker Sabu.

  • LulzSec Indictments Available Online

    LulzSec Indictments Available Online

    We just brought you coverage of Sabu’s LulzSec betrayal. And now, the court documents that were unsealed this morning in the six hackers’ indictments come to you on the interwebs.

    Here’s Sabu’s:

    Monsegur, Hector Xavier Information

    And Jeremy Hammond’s:

    Hammond, Jeremy Complaint

    Ackroyd and Company:

    Ackroyd, Et Al. Indictment

    And O’Cearrbhail again:

    Cearrbhail Donncha Complaint

    We’ll keep you informed as events unfold. Until then, happy reading.

    Hat tip to Gizmodo. Thanks, guys.

  • LulzSec Turncoat: Sabu Betrays His Own

    LulzSec Turncoat: Sabu Betrays His Own

    Three key hackers were arrested today, and two more charged with conspiracy, in actions by law enforcement agents in the United States and Great Britain. The five hackers, who have ties to Anonymous, LulzSec, Internet Feds, and AntiSec, were allegedly betrayed by one of their own. In a remarkable display of internet finkdom, former LulzSec ringleader Hector Xavier Monsegur (you probably know him better as “Sabu”) has been reportedly working with the feds for months, according to a Fox News Exclusive.

    “They caught him and he was secretly arrested and now works for the FBI,” reports Fox News, citing a source close to Sabu.

    Foxnews.com reports Monsegur’s cooperation “was confirmed by numerous senior-level officials. … As a result, the remaining top-ranking members of LulzSec were arrested or hit with additional charges Tuesday morning.”

    An FBI release disclosed the identities of the captured hackers. Listed among the defendants are Ryan Ackroyd (alias “kayla”), 23, of Doncaster, UK; Jake Davis (alias “topiary”), 18, of Lerwick, Shetland Islands, UK; Darren Martyn (alias “pwnsauce”), 25, of Galway Ireland; Donncha O’Cearrbhail (alias “palladium”), 19, of Birr, Ireland; and Jeremy Hammond (alias “Anarchaos”), 27, of Chicago. They face a combined total of eight counts of computer hacking conspiracy, one count of computer hacking, one count of conspiracy to commit access device fraud, and one count of intentionally disclosing an unlawfully intercepted wire communication. Each count carries a maximum sentence of 5-10 years in prison.

    The four young lads from the UK and Ireland are suspected members of LulzSec, while Hammond is the suspected mastermind behind the December 2011 Stratfor Hack, which resulted in the release on WikiLeaks of over five million of the security consulting company’s internal emails.

    Monsegur, a 28-year-old unemployed man from New York, pled guilty in August to twelve counts of Computer Hacking, Conspiracy, and Aggravated Identity Theft, and currently faces a maximum sentence of 124 years and six months in prison. His cooperation with authorities is believed to have been prompted by his concern for his kids. It’s a bit ironic, his involvement with the government, especially in light of this tweet from yesterday:

    The federal government is run by a bunch of fucking cowards. Don’t give in to these people. Fight back. Stay strong.(image) 23 hours ago via Twitter for BlackBerry® ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    This marks a fair bit of egg on Anonymous’s [lack of a?] face in the past few days. First a Trojan-infected DDoS tool, and now some high-level backstabbing? Let’s have a look at Twitter’s response to the embarrassment.

    #Anonymous to prevail sans #Sabu: ‘He’s a traitor; #LulzSec long-dead; we have no leaders’ http://t.co/prq96216(image) 40 minutes ago via HootSuite ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    I do like seeing that the snitch is facing 125 years while the rest of the group are looking at ten. #Sabu(image) 2 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Strangely, the paranoia will probably help Anonymous heal. #sabu(image) 4 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    So not only was #sabu caught, he then turned informant. Cannot wait to see collapsing vortex of hypocrisy this will create within the ranks(image) 6 hours ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    #Sabu betrayed his buddies because of his children. http://t.co/3Q9T2iPB(image) 9 minutes ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    When they said the name #Sabu… Thought they were talking about the ECW Wrestler… Silly me… Lol… #TwitterFun(image) 52 minutes ago via Twitter for iPhone ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    PhotoCred: Foxnews.com.
    What do you think? Add your opinion in the comments.