LulzSec FTW!!

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Dec 4, 2006
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#1
http://www.boingboing.net/2011/06/23/breaking-lulzsec-lea.html

We are releasing hundreds of private intelligence bulletins, training manuals, personal email correspondence, names, phone numbers, addresses and passwords belonging to Arizona law enforcement. We are targeting AZDPS specifically because we are against SB1070 and the racial profiling anti-immigrant police state that is Arizona.





I was somewhat upset with them for bringing down the PS Network down, but now I'm siding with them all the way!

These guys are the real deal! MAJOR PROPS!
 

mrtonguetwista

$$ Deep Pockets $$
Feb 6, 2003
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#11
WASHINGTON/BOSTON (Reuters) – Computer hackers who previously broke into a U.S. Senate server and brought down the CIA web site struck an Arizona police web site on Thursday, releasing dozens of internal documents over the Internet.

Lulz Security, saying it opposed a tough anti-immigration law in Arizona, said it was releasing documents that related to border control and other law enforcement activities. Its headline was "Chinga La Migra," Spanish for a more profane way of saying "Screw the Immigration Service."

It released about a half a gigabyte of data, including account names, passwords and contact information for several people. Reuters was able to reach two of them to establish that they were accurate.

A scan of the dozens of files released revealed what appeared to be security bulletins from other law enforcement agencies, internal planning documents and even routine reports on traffic incidents.

"We are aware of computer issues," said Steve Harrison, a spokesman for the Arizona Department of Public Safety, "We're looking into it. And of course we're taking additional security safeguards."

The Mexico border state passed a law last year ordering police to check the immigration status of anyone suspected to be in the United States illegally, in a bid to curb illegal immigration and border-related crime.

A majority of Americans supported the measure, but outraged opponents charged it was unconstitutional and would lead to the harassment of Hispanic-Americans, and called for an economic boycott of the desert state.

The most controversial parts of the law were blocked by a federal judge shortly before it came into effect last July, although Arizona is pursuing an appeal.

FEW ARRESTS

Lulz, a group of rogue hackers who have not been identified, posts the results of its hacks on Twitter, the microblogging site where the group has cultivated more than 240,000 followers.

So far LulzSec's publicized assaults on Sony Corp., the CIA, News Corp's Fox TV and other targets have mostly resulted in temporary disruptions of some websites and the release of user credentials.

There have been few arrests in the hacks. British police said on Tuesday that they had arrested a 19-year-old man on suspicion that he was connected to attacks on Sony, the CIA and a British police unit that fights organized crime.

Spanish police earlier this month apprehended three men on suspicion they helped Anonymous, a second rogue hacking group that has teamed up with LulzSec.

Hacker attacks forced Brazil to shut down its presidential website and other government sites temporarily on Thursday, a day after cyber attacks briefly disabled other government sites.

LulzSec, whose hacks started to hit headlines last month, has published the email addresses and passwords of thousands of alleged subscribers to porn sites, it temporarily took down the public website of the CIA, and it published data from internal servers of the U.S. Senate.

Security experts who have researched LulzSec's origins say it emerged from Anonymous, which became famous for attacking the companies and institutions that oppose WikiLeaks and its founder, Julian Assange. Anonymous also attacked Sony and governments around the globe that it considered oppressive.

LulzSec's members are believed to be scattered around the world, collaborating via secret Internet chat rooms. Suspected leaders include hackers with the handles Kayla, Sabu and Topiary, security experts say.

The group's name is a combination of lulz, which is slang for laughs, and sec, which stands for security
 

Defy

Cannabis Connoisseur
Jan 23, 2006
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Rich City
#12
I'm all for what LulzSec has been doing, even the psn attack...what sucks is that the US has passed a law recently classifying hacking as an act of war which would mean the use of deadly force is allowed in retailiation of hacking the US government
 

NAMO

Sicc OG
Apr 11, 2009
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#14
some of the ones caught were 18 or some shit..

I couldn't use a calculator at 18 let alone hack into some fbi files
 
Apr 26, 2006
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#15
Props to these hackers. Now if only Wiki Leaks can step their shit up. They were supposed to release some shit about a major bank early on this year, but I don't think it ever came out.
 

Defy

Cannabis Connoisseur
Jan 23, 2006
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Rich City
#17
The only thing hella not gangster about lulzsec....well besides them being hella not gangster, is that when one of the kids got caught rather than denying he was involved they said he was kinda involved, so they pretty much snitched on the kid making sure he's gonna serve time
 

mrtonguetwista

$$ Deep Pockets $$
Feb 6, 2003
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#18
NEW YORK (AP) - A publicity-seeking hacker group that has blazed a path of destruction on the Internet over the last two months says it is dissolving itself.

Lulz Security made its announcement Saturday through its Twitter account. In an unusual strategy for a hacker group, LulzSec has used the account as a publicity platform while remaining anonymous.

The group's disbandment comes unexpectedly, and could be a sign of nerves in the face of law enforcement investigations. One of the group's six members was interviewed by The Associated Press on Friday, and gave no indication that its work was ending.

LulzSec claimed hacks on major entertainment companies, FBI partner organizations, the CIA, the U.S. Senate and a pornography website.