Information Security News mailing list archives

Arab Web sites cite rise in hacking attempts during war


From: InfoSec News <isn () c4i org>
Date: Fri, 18 Apr 2003 06:37:05 -0500 (CDT)

http://www.nandotimes.com/technology/story/857453p-6002265c.html

By RAWYA RAGEH, Associated Press
 
DOHA, Qatar (April 17, 2003 3:41 a.m. EDT) - The war in Iraq set off a
rash of online vandalism against Arab Web sites, site administrators
and security experts say, with dozens of Web sites attacked.

At Islamonline.net, one of the most popular destinations for reports
and analysis on Islamic affairs, traffic doubled after U.S. forces
invaded Iraq. So did cyberattacks, which reached 250 a day, according
to Mutiullah Ta'eb, the site's general coordinator.

Another attack put Arabia.com, a Dubai-based Web site, off line the
third day of the war.

It is not clear how many sites have been targeted in the attacks,
which typically sought to alter Web pages or bring a site down.

Ta'eb of Doha-based Islamonline said hacking attempts also stepped up
after the Sept. 11 attacks.

"It is not fair," says Mariam al-Hajiry, the site's administrator.  
"But I guess it is all part of the challenge that we have taken upon
our shoulders ... to be able to deliver our message."

Islamonline contains information about Islam in English with a
moderate and measured tone, and does not express the kind of extreme
stances found on militant sites.

Citing security concerns, Ta'eb would not say what kind of attacks
Islamonline has faced.

The most high-profile Arab Web site targeted by hackers is that of
satellite news channel Al-Jazeera.

The channel, an unusually outspoken voice in the Arab world, based in
Doha, drew intense criticism after it carried Iraqi TV footage of dead
and captive U.S. soldiers that U.S. networks declined to air.

Soon after, the site's English and Arabic pages were replaced by
pro-American hackers who called themselves the "Freedom Cyber Force
Militia."

Similarly, pro-Islamic hackers have defaced some U.S. and British Web
sites and flooded some with anti-war graffiti.

"Indeed, this has been happening a lot lately," said Mikko Hypponen,
manager of the antivirus research department at the Helsinki-based
security firm F-Secure Corp.

"Of course, all this activity is unofficial and is not done by the
real state-sponsored network warfare units - but by independent groups
and lone hackers," Hypponen said.

Experts say the importance of the phenomenon should not be overstated.  
Though it threatens surfers' ability to communicate and gather
information freely, it is not real war.

"If cyberwarfare was truly effective, it would be likely that we would
see terrorist groups and nation states using the Internet for warfare
rather than using troops and missiles," said Graham Cluley, senior
technology consultant at security firm Sophos Inc. near Boston.

Hackers deface hundreds of Web sites every day, mostly without
political messages, and the percentage of attacks related to the war
is apparently small.

With most Arab media controlled by their governments, the Internet
gives Arabs access to an unusually broad range of views. However, only
1.7 percent of the Arab world, or 7.4 million people, had Internet
access late last year, according to the Madar Research Group of the
United Arab Emirates.



-
ISN is currently hosted by Attrition.org

To unsubscribe email majordomo () attrition org with 'unsubscribe isn'
in the BODY of the mail.


Current thread: