The
hacktivist group Anonymous launched a massive cyber assault on Israel
yesterday in what they called “the largest internet battle in the
history of mankind”.
While
it is not the first time the hacktivist collective has launched
#OpIsrael, it seems to be the largest operation of this scale so far.
Organisers said the attacks were revenge over Israel’s “unfair treatment
of Palestinians”.
In
a video posted on YouTube, Anonymous said they would “erase Israel from
cyberspace”. As with their previous operations, the hacktivist
collective took to Twitter to report their activities. Anonymous
announced on YouTube that OpIsrael would begin on April 7 when “elite
cyber-squadrons from around the world have decided to unite in
solidarity with the Palestinian people against Israel as one entity.”
The
group also addressed the Israeli government, saying: “You have NOT
stopped your endless human right violations. You have NOT stopped
illegal [colonies] settlements. You have NOT respected the ceasefire.
You have shown that you do NOT respect international law.”
Deputy
Information Security Officer Ofir Cohen added of the impending OpIsrael
assault: “The estimations are that [the cyber-attacks] will reach an
unusual level that we have never seen before.”
The list includes banks, schools, businesses and a host of prominent government websites.
The
attack which fell on the eve of Holocaust Memorial Day, was played down
by Israeli officials. Yitzhak Ben Yisrael, of the government’s National
Cyber Bureau, said hackers had mostly failed to shut down key sites.
“So
far it is as was expected, there is hardly any real damage,” Ben
Yisrael said. “Anonymous doesn’t have the skills to damage the country’s
vital infrastructure. And if that was its intention, then it wouldn’t
have announced the attack ahead of time. It wants to create noise in the
media about issues that are close to its heart,” he said.
“God bless the minds and the efforts of the soldiers of the electronic battle,” Ehab Al Ghussian, Gaza’s chief government spokesman, wrote on his official Facebook page.
“God bless the minds and the efforts of the soldiers of the electronic battle,” Ehab Al Ghussian, Gaza’s chief government spokesman, wrote on his official Facebook page.
Anonymous
is a decentralised virtual community referred to as an internet-based
collective of hacktivists whose goals, like its organisation, are
decentralised. An official of the militant Hamas movement that rules the
Gaza Strip praised the current attack. The loosely affiliated network
of hacktivists, has attacked sites around the world, including those of
MasterCard and Visa, the Justice Department and the Tunisian and Yemeni
governments.
On
Thursday, the group claimed to have broken into at least two of North
Korea’s government-run online sites. The North’s Uriminzokkiri Twitter
and Flickr accounts stopped sending out content typical of that posted
by the regime in Pyongyang, such as photos of North Korea’s leader Kim
Jong-un meeting military officials. Instead, a picture posted on the
North’s Flickr site shows Kim’s face with a pig-like snout and a drawing
of Mickey Mouse on his chest. Underneath, the text reads: “Threatening
world peace with ICBMs and Nuclear weapons/Wasting money while his
people starve to death.”
A
statement purporting to come from the attackers and widely circulated
online said they had compromised 15,000 user records hosted on
Uriminzokkiri.com and other websites. US President Barack Obama’s State
of the Union Address this year addressed the growing threat of hackers
and he introduced an executive order aimed at combating it.
Much
of the executive order focuses on enabling government agencies to share
information about cybersecurity threats with the private sector. The
group is responsible for cyber-attacks on the Pentagon, News Corp and
has also threatened to destroy Facebook.
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