Anonymous
Claims It Hacked Fed, Releases Confidential Banker Information
4
February, 2013
A
year and a half ago, when the hacker group Anonymous launched its
anti-Bernanke, anti-Fed campaign dubbed Operation Empire State
Rebellion (or OpESR), we
stated, rhetorically and
jokingly, that "perhaps in the aftermath of the IMF
"very major breach"by
anonymous hackers, it
is really time to make sure all external access points
toFedWire and FedLine are
truly safe and sound.
It will be very sad if it is uncovered that this source of externally
accessible portal to hundreds of billions in emergency Fed funding
has been somehow compromised. Just imagine the loss of confidence in
the system... Why, a global distributed attack would really stretch
the Fed's
1,200-strong police force quite
thin." It appears that either FedWire or FedLine may not have
been "truly
safe and sound"
after all.
Recall
that a week ago in retribution for the suicide of Aaron
Swartz, Anonymous
launched yet another "operation"
this time titled "Last
Resort",
as a result of which it hacked the Department of Justice and released
a 1.3 GB folder of still encrypted "warhead" data
containing files each named for Supreme Court Justices. And while
there has been no additional disclosure on this latest operation,
Anonymous may have reverted to the mothballed OpESR, by hacking none
other than the Fed.
As ZD
reports, last
night Anonymous once again hacked a .gov site, this time the Alabama
Criminal Justice Information Center (ACJIC). But it was not the site
hacked that was material, but rather what was posted on it. What was
posted is an extended data dump sheet, titled "oops
we did it again"
which lists some 4,606 rows of confidential credential data including
titles, names, addresses, emails, phone numbers, logins, password
hashes, and much more. The spreadsheet can be found at this link.
And
while the data contains primarily B-grade information, with no New
York bank disclosure at least on a cursory check, a more important
question is where was this data sources. Anonymous itself provides a
clue in a tweet from last night:
Now
we have your attention America: Anonymous's Superbowl Commercial 4k
banker d0x via the
FEDhttp://acjic.alabama.gov/documents/oops-we-did-it-again.html … #opLastResort#Anonymous
And
judging by the level of detail, it is possible that Anonymous did
indeed hack either FedWire or FedLine, although it is just as
possible this was merely grabbing root data in some low security
regional Fed website.
Anonymous
provides some additional information in a further tweet:
We
note that the Federal Reserve minidrop earlier was just a
counter-distraction to the superbowl distraction. We await the DOJ's
statement.
In
other words, to Anonymous this is merely an escalation of its
Anti-DOJ campaign demanding structural changes (good luck) as
retribution for the Swartz death. It is unlikely it will get them
.
What
is curious, however, is if Anonymous really did penetrate one of the
Fed's critical money clearing networks, and if indeed it has access
to key financial data at the granular, regional bank level. A bigger
question then is just how much more Fed-level access does Anonymous
have, and will it resort to it as its demands are unmet by the DOJ in
the coming days. Or in other words, what else can and will Anonymous
release?
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