Battle of the hackers
2003-07-07 08:00
Washington - A battle among hackers erupted on the internet as some factions disrupted a loosely co-ordinated "contest" among other groups trying to vandalise thousands of websites around the world.
Unknown attackers knocked offline for most of Sunday an independent security website, zone-h.org, that was verifying reports of online vandalism and being used by hackers to tally points for the competition.
US government and private technology experts warned last week that such vandalism was likely.
At least three such vigilante-style attacks forced the hacker organiser, who identified himself only as "Eleonora[67]", to extend the contest on Sunday.
But with disruptions preventing vandals from claiming credit for their break-ins, some experts said it could be later this week before damage from this weekend's hacking would be known.
By late on Sunday - with the zone-h.org website still offline - hackers had claimed responsibility for vandalising hundreds of mostly obscure websites, such as ones for Security Title Co and the Heart of Montana Realty Services, both of Bozeman, Mont.
Improved online security
There were no reports of vandalism involving flagship internet sites most consumers would recognise, a testament to improved online security over the past decade inside large corporations, government agencies and organisations.
"We at least knew it was coming," said Peter Allor of Internet Security Systems Inc, which distributed a warning on Wednesday about the contest using an alert system for technology companies. "We took some efforts to harden our sites."
Internet Security Systems, citing the contest, had raised its alert level to its second notch, reflecting "increased vigilance".
But other security vendors, such as Symantec Corp, and even some government agencies downplayed the threats from Sunday's attacks.
The US Federal Computer Incident Response Centre, an arm of the Department of Homeland Security, described the severity as "low", and the New York State Office of Cyber Security and Critical Infrastructure Co-ordination kept its alert level at its lowest setting all day on Sunday.
Some of the relatively unknown websites vandalised on Sunday, such as one for a church in California, were converted into informal reporting mechanisms for identifying other hacked sites.
Many security experts said the nickname of the hacker claiming responsibility for the contest, "Eleonora[67]", was unfamiliar.
- AP