Acidmods
Members Area => News => Tech News => Topic started by: whitetop on June 18, 2011, 04:21:52 PM
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(https://acidmods.com/forum/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fimg402.imageshack.us%2Fimg402%2F9140%2Flulzsecimage15183339.jpg&hash=843b62e5a8adc0854d960d972ae0975b7b5c7c69)
A statement the group has posted says going public with user personal details after a hack attack is better than keeping exploits private. It gives users a chance to change their passwords, the group says.
Such public releases are also arguably good for websites too. After the group published 26,000 emails and passwords stolen from porn sites last week, Facebook automatically locked every account linked to the email addresses, stopping the kind of unauthorized access LulzSec discusses.
LulzSec says its hack attacks will continue until "we're brought to justice, which we might well be."
The group's statement amounts to a manifesto and is surprisingly more erudite than might be expected.
"We're attracted to fast-changing scenarios, we can't stand repetitiveness,"
the group says. "Nobody is truly causing the Internet to slip one way or the other, it's an inevitable outcome for us humans."
LulzSec members were considered righteous vigilantes by some sectors of the Internet after their repeated attacks against Sony, which were carried out in response to Sony's hounding of PS3 hardware hacker George Hotz. However, support has been waning after the group targeted non-Sony game servers this week. Perhaps surprisingly, in the statement the group attempts to distance itself from these attacks, pointing out they were done "by the request of callers to its telephone request line not by our own choice"
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And not everything the group has done has appeared malicious. Although it hacked into the British health system computers, it declined to cause damage or publish details, instead warning admins that the system was insecure.
The group denies it's locked in a hacker war with similar group Anonymous. This had been suggested after LulzSec targeted the 4Chan website with a denial of service attack following attempts by 4Chan users to expose members of LulzSec.
The full statement from LulzSec can be found on the PasteBin website. (http://pastebin.com/HZtH523f)
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very good read whitetop thanks.
LOOLOL SO TRUE LOL
But you know, we just don't give a living truck at this point - you'll forget about us in 3 months' time when there's a new scandal to gawk at, or a new shiny thing to click on via your 2D light-filled rectangle. People who can make things work better within this rectangle have power over others; the whitehats who charge $10,000 for something we could teach you how to do over the course of a weekend, providing you aren't mentally disabled.
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thx fookz at least someone read it and replayed
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nice.