Anonymous Group Says It Gave Syrian E-mails to WikiLeaks
You might also like
|
|
|
|
|
Days after WikiLeaks began releasing a trove of more than 2 million e-mails stolen from Syrian officials, ministries and companies, members of an Anonymous group have claimed responsibility for the hacks and document dump to Wikileaks. In a press release published Saturday , a group calling itself Anonymous Op Syria disclosed that its members hacked into multiple domains and dozens of servers inside Syria on Feb. 5 to obtain the e-mails, which it then gave to WikiLeaks. WikiLeaks began publishing the e-mails on July 5, working with several media partners outside the United States, but didn’t disclose its partnership with Anonymous. In its intro to the e-mail cache, WikiLeaks indicated that they came from 678,000 individual e-mail addresses and 680 domains, including ones belonging to Syria’s Ministries of Presidential Affairs, Foreign Affairs, Finance, Information, Transport and Culture.

Here is the original:
Anonymous Group Says It Gave Syrian E-mails to WikiLeaks
|
|
|
|
|
Tags: account, addresses, affairs, financial, guardian, newspaper, officials, partners, regime, result, transfers
| 1 | UsenetServer | = Best Annual $95.40 |
| 2 | Newshosting | = Best Overall |
| 3 | Easynews | = Best for Beginners |
Canadian Police and Government Caught Pirating Movies and TV-Shows
Fighting Censorship, Proxies Gear Up to Unblock More Torrent Sites
Efemr Lets You Set Tweets to Self-Destruct