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Category — hacking incident
FBI Investigates Gawker Media Hack Claimed by Gnosis

FBI Investigates Gawker Media Hack Claimed by Gnosis

Dec 20, 2010
The FBI is investigating the massive hack of Gawker Media. Reports indicate that FBI agents met with Gawker Media CEO Nick Denton on Monday following the hacking incident, which was claimed by a group called Gnosis. The Gawker website was paralyzed, temporarily forcing the gossip site to stop publishing. Hackers managed to access over 100,000 passwords and emails from the 1.3 million registered users. The site was forced to stop publishing on Sunday and sent emails to all registered users, urging them to change their passwords. According to reports, Gawker Media CEO Nick Denton admitted, "We're deeply embarrassed by this breach." Tips to Keep Your Passwords Safe Online Don't Use the Same Password for Everything Using one password for all your accounts is unsafe. If a hacker gets your password for one account, they can access all your online identities. Use Different Passwords for Different Accounts Create and use strong, unique passwords for your online b...
Former UCM Students Charged with Hacking and Data Theft

Former UCM Students Charged with Hacking and Data Theft

Dec 02, 2010
Two former University of Central Missouri students have been charged with hacking university databases, stealing confidential information, and attempting to sell it for profit. Joseph Camp and Daniel Fowler were indicted by a federal grand jury. They allegedly created a computer virus and spread it through email attachments and USB flash drives. They breached the personal data of about 90,000 UCM students, faculty, staff, and alumni. Camp and Fowler then tried to sell the information for $35,000. The seven-count indictment also charges them with attempting to steal university funds and using Facebook accounts to threaten potential witnesses. The charges could result in prison sentences of between two and ten years. According to a Computerworld report, "The duo used Fowler's room as their base and, over a three-month period between October and December 2009, broke into numerous university databases and computers, including one belonging to a university administrator." ...
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