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US government Web site hacked

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CIOL Bureau
New Update

Elinor Mills Abreu

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SAN FRANCISCO: The US government is investigating an attack on one of its Web

sites in which a well-known Pakistani hacker group posted a message threatening

to turn sensitive information over to the Al Qaeda organization unless the

United States agreed to meet its terms.

A Web server for the National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)

was disabled for a few hours on Oct. 17 and has since been taken down, Greg

Hernandez, online editor and Web master for the NOAA Web site, said on Thursday.

"The Internet security team is still doing forensics to see exactly

where this attack originated," Hernandez said. "They found a (digital)

back door key and got in there and did this, but it did not affect the

operational side" of the site.

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The message from the hacker group said: "Though GForce Pakistan condemns

the attacks on US, We also stand by Al-Qaeda," the renegade organization

run by Osama bin Laden that is believed to be responsible for the Sept. 11

hijacking attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

"We have some very high confidential US data that will be given to the

right authorities of Al-Qaeda, remember if you give us peace you will get

peace," the message said, according to a Web site that has mirrored the

defaced site.

The hackers also demanded that the US remove troops from Saudi Arabia, stop

bombing Afghanistan and stop supporting Israel. The group threatened to hack

undisclosed major Web sites, but added that they "won't hurt any data, as

it's unethical. All we want is our message conveyed."

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The defaced Web site was the "back-up to a back-up" to weather

forecasting data NOAA provides to the Federal Aviation Administration, Hernandez

said.

The US National Infrastructure Protection Center, which is run by the Federal

Bureau of Investigation, issued an advisory last week warning that there may be

more "cyber protests" in light of the military conflicts. While Web

site defacements are the cyber equivalent of graffiti and more annoying than

damaging, the advisory warns that more harmful activities could follow.

"While the cyber damage thus far has been minimal, the infrastructure

will certainly be a target of cyber protesters and hactivists in the future,

with the potential goal being intentional destruction rather than public

embarrassment or purely political statements," the advisory said.

(C) Reuters Limited.

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