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Misha Glenny: Hire the hackers! PDF Print
Written by Andrew Fursman   
Wednesday, 12 October 2011 22:21

 
LulzSec - June 2011 PDF Print
Written by Andrew Fursman   
Thursday, 23 June 2011 22:51

lulzsec exploits

 
Tupac Shakur hacker of PBS moves on to attacking Sony PDF Print
Written by Sarah Anne Hughes   
Wednesday, 01 June 2011 06:30

 

This frame grab of the PBS Web site shows a screen that appeared Monday. (AP) A group known as LulzSec, or The Lulz Boat, is taking credit for hacking into the PBS “News Hour” Web site and posting an article claiming that rappers Tupac and Biggie Smalls are alive. (They are not.)

 

According to the group’s very active Twitter, the hack was retribution for the “Wikisecrets” episode of Frontline. The group tweeted @WikiLeaks, “We hope our hacking gave Bradley Manning a smile. That man deserves something nice,” referring to the U.S. soldier who allegedly leaked restricted materials to the organization.

 

Whirlpool, a member of LulzSec, confirmed the hack’s motive to Forbes Tuesday over Instant Message chat, saying that the documentary “painted a negative picture on WikiLeaks.” The hacker said he originally planned to “write about Obama choking to death on a marshmallow, but ... figured Tupac would be funnier.”

 

PBS is still having some trouble with their site, and has moved their homepage to Tumblr during the outage. LulzSec, meanwhile, seems to have started a new hack — this time on the Sony Web sites again.

 

LulzSec said on Twitter they are currently rolling out the next phase of “Sownage” — that’s Sony plus the word ownage — taunting the company with tweets including, “Hey @Sony, you know we're making off with a bunch of your internal stuff right now and you haven't even noticed? Slow and steady, guys.” They already claimed responsibility for an earlier hack on Sony music site in Japan.

 

The group is apparently not responsible for the massive breach on Sony.com and the PlayStation Network, which possibly left about 70 million users’ credit card information vulnerable. But it did take credit for leaking the e-mail usernames and passwords of Fox Broadcasting employees and the names, e-mails and phone numbers of contestants from the upcoming American version of “The X Factor.”

 

As blogger Zennie62 pointed out, it appears that AT&T may be the group’s next target. This prediction comes courtesy of a May 17 tweet: “AT&T aren’t going to enjoy what The Lulz Boat is cooking.” But it doesn’t seem the group will stop there: “We’re hard at work. Multiple targets, vast lulz possibilities.”

 

This year alone, several high profile companies have been hacked. When Wikileaks’s founder Julian Assange was arrested in December, Operation Payback, launched by Anonymous, hacked the Web sites of MasterCard, Visa and Paypal. The group leaked e-mails from a Bank of America employee in March.

 

So are all the LulzSec’s hacks done for a specific purpose, like the one on PBS? It doesn’t seem so.Whirlpool told Forbes the group’s “main goal is to spread entertainment,” with the PBS hack done partly for “lulz.” On question-and-answer Web site, Formspring, the group said their “goal is to spread fun, fun, fun!”

 

Last Updated on Wednesday, 01 June 2011 06:36
 
Unleashing the Power of Emergent Entrepreneurship PDF Print
Written by Christian Busch   
Wednesday, 25 August 2010 19:42

SU Image

Imagine the highest concentration of emergent change makers on the planet in one spot and the unstoppable energy released in such a gathering.

 

This is what happened this weekend in Silicon Valley. Sandbox, Singularity University, and Sparkseed were on a good track to repeat the incredible flashmob phenomenon of TEDxVolcano; within 5 days the collaborative power of Bjoern Lasse Herrmann, Mike Del Ponte, Zain Jaffer, Max Marmer and Nathaniel Whittemore created an epic event at the Dangerously Ambitious Conference. More than 220 young leaders from artificial intelligence, neuroscience, design & education to courageous front liners in the Congo war. An incredible selection of passionate entrepreneurs from more than 40 nations. They were joined by TEDsters, White House staff and many of the trail blazer entrepreneurs who have made Silicon Valley into what it is today.

 

What was it all about? The aim was to connect people who truly transform society around the world by fundamentally changing how we do things. The motto of Singularity University summarizes this with the question “how can we impact 1 Billion lives in 10 years?”.

 

Nathaniel from Asset Map moderated an exciting pitch session preceding the dinner with some aspiring social ventures such as Starting Bloc, Holstee, Falling Whistles, Startl, among others – profound idea-sex, and deep discussions provided fruitful ground for kicking off new projects and scaling up existing ones. Top angel investors rounded up the event’s catalyzing ecosystem.

 

We are looking forward to many more of these events allover the (Sandbox-) world, the next one happening in Washington, D.C. this Friday!

 

Last Updated on Wednesday, 25 August 2010 21:17
 
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