Booz Allen Hamilton Data Hacked

Hacker outfit Anonymous has published 90,000 military e-mail addresses and passwords as part of a project called Military Meltdown Monday, now they exposed Booz Allen Hamilton data. It released an approximately 190MB data torrent, which contained login information of personnel from US CENTCOM, SOCOM, the Marine Corps, Air Force facilities, Department of Homeland Security, Department of State and other private sector contractors……………..

 

Hacker group Anonymous released a trove of military email addresses and passwords it claimed to have plundered from the network of US defense consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton. Anonymous made available a file containing more than 90,000 email addresses and other information it said in online messages that it stole from an unprotected server at Booz Allen. “Anonymous claims to have erased four gigabytes worth of source code and to have discovered information which could help them attack US government and other contractors’ systems,” computer security firm Sophos said in a blog post. “While this should certainly be embarrassing to Booz Allen Hamilton, the real impact is on the US military,” the post continued. In a message accompanying the data at file-sharing website The Pirate Bay, Anonymous said Booz Allen was targeted in a “Meltdown Monday” as part of an anti-security, or antisec, movement. “So in this line of work you’d expect them to sail the seven proxseas with a state-of-the-art battleship, right?” Anonymous said, using pirate jargon and playing off a reference to proxy computer servers.

 

“Well, you may be as surprised as we were when we found their vessel being a puny wooden barge,” the message continued. “We infiltrated a server in their network that basically had no security measures in place.” While some downplayed the value of the looted data, computer security specialists warn that the email addresses could be used to target messages that trick recipients into revealing information or downloading viruses. Booz Allen declined to comment on the incident, citing a company policy of not discussing specific threats or actions taken against our systems. Anonymous rose to infamy last year with cyber attacks in support of controversial whistle-blower website WikiLeaks. The group was linked to attacks on Visa, Mastercard and Paypal, which blocked donations to WikiLeaks after it published thousands of US diplomatic cables. Early this year, Anonymous took credit for breaking into the website of HBGary Federal, stealing tens of thousands of email messages and temporarily routing traffic to a page with a vitriolic message.

 

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This Post Has One Comment

  1. dazzlepod

    For military personnel to check if your account was leaked, http://dazzlepod.com/boozallen/

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