The mischief keeps coming from hacking collective LulzSec, but today's attack might be its biggest and most serious yet: The goofy hackers with the logo reminiscent of Mr. Peanut claimed it took down the Central Intelligence Agency's Web site. (Temporarily, at least: though at 6:50 p.m. we couldn't load the CIA's site, as of 7:20 p.m. it's back, though a bit sluggish.) They announced via Twitter shortly before 6 p.m. that cia.gov had been taken down, "Tango down ... for the lulz," and adding later, "Come for the DDoS, stay for the h4x."
The group has been "fed-baiting" of late, as Andy Greenberg puts it, most recently claiming a data breach of the U.S. Senate's site and previously exposing login data from a security firm affiliated with the Federal Bureau of Investigation. But targeting the CIA's site would be the group's most significant attack on a government site. As we pointed out when they went after the Senate, the Pentagon has recently declared cyber-attacks to be acts of war. But the group's attitude seems clear from the language in their Senate data dump: "is this an act of war, gentlemen? Problem?" It probably is a problem now.
Want to add to this story? Let us know in comments
or send an email to the author at
amartin at theatlantic dot com.
You can share ideas for stories on the Open Wire.
Adam Martin



User Comments
Please type your comment and click Post. If you’re not already logged in you will be prompted to log in or register