IIT Delhi, AMU websites hacked, displays "Pakistan Zindabad"
At the time of publishing this story, the websites of IIT Delhi, AMU and
DU were hacked.
Pro-Kashmir
messages were displayed by a hacker group that called itself as 'PHC'.
The
message was: "Greetings Government of India, and the people of India. Do
you know what your so-called heroes are doing in Kashmir? Do you know they are
killing many innocent people in Kashmir?"
06 Oct 2016: A digital manifestation of the
Indo-Pak conflict
With increasing ceasefire violations along the Line of
Control, tensions are high between India and Pakistan and there is talk of war
in the air.
Amidst all the crossfire and commotion, hackers from both
countries have resorted to cyber attacks.
Is this digital war a sign of things to
come?
Indian
hackers: Indian hackers ready to dismantle Pakistan's digital assets
S. Amar Prasad Reddy, the
Additional Director-General of the National Cyber Safety and Security
Standards, said that the organization had hacked into Pakistan's critical
infrastructure systems.
He said that the organization's team had
access to Pakistan's defence infrastructure as well as all gov.pk websites.
He added that the team
would destroy the aforementioned infrastructure systems if they received a
go-ahead from the Indian government.
Fact:
"We are ready"
"If
necessary, we can damage their [Pakistan's] digital asset. We have penetrated
into their defence infrastructure. If we get the go-ahead from the government,
we can do it. We are ready," said Mr. Reddy.
Pakistani
hackers: Pakistani hackers hack into 7,000 plus Indian websites
A
group of Pakistani hackers called Haxors Crew hacked into 7,070 Indian
websites, and released a list stating the names of the websites hacked.
However, cyber security
specialists claimed that the hackers were rookies and couldn't write their own
code.
Although most of the
hacked websites are non-government websites, the attack shows the vulnerability
of Indian websites to such threats.
Fact:
Haxors Crew are "script kiddies"
"They
are not even proper hackers. They are what we call script kiddies, people who
use existing computer scripts to hack into computers as they lack the expertise
to write their own," said Mirza Faizan Asad, the legal head of Global
Cyber Security Response Team.
16
Dec 2016: Potential spying apps from Pakistan
According
to an alert issued by the Home Ministry, Pakistan agencies are snooping on
Indians by sending malware through smartphone apps.
There are 4 apps that are
currently a serious threat to Indian users; they are Top Gun (gaming), Mpjunkie
(music), Bdjunkie (video) and Talking Frog (entertainment).
According to reports,
Pakistani agencies are circulating the aforementioned apps to steal information
from people's phones.
The
website of IIT Madras was hacked and defaced by a Pakistan based hacker
identified as 'Faisal 1337x.'
He put the photo of the
joker from Batman in the garb of Ronald McDonald on its page, and wrote
"Pakistan Zindabad" and "You don't know the power of Pakistan
hackers."
The site was working
fine, except the defaced pages, which were eventually restored.
01
Jan 2017: NSG website hacked
The
website of the NSG has been hacked by a group/hacker called Alone Injector; on
the homepage, the hackers say freeing Kashmir is their goal.
They also posted Pakistan
Zindabad on the website's news feed and went on to abuse PM Modi and threatened
India with dire consequences for attacking Pakistan.
So far authorities have
not taken down the objectionable content.
25
Apr 2017: IIT Delhi, AMU websites hacked, displays "Pakistan
Zindabad"
At
the time of publishing this story, the websites of IIT Delhi, AMU and DU were
hacked.
Pro-Kashmir messages were
displayed by a hacker group that called itself as 'PHC'.
The message was:
"Greetings Government of India, and the people of India. Do you know what
your so-called heroes are doing in Kashmir? Do you know they are killing many
innocent people in Kashmir?"
26
Apr 2017: Indian hackers take down 500 Pakistani websites
Reports
indicated that in response to Pakistani hackers attacking Indian universities'
websites, Indian hackers have taken down over 500 Pakistani websites.
Earlier, Pakistani
hackers had attacked websites of Aligarh Muslim University, Delhi University,
and several others over alleged atrocities committed by Indian armed forces in
Kashmir.
India
had earlier attacked Pakistani websites over Kulbushan Jadhav's death penalty.
Post a Comment