Showing posts sorted by relevance for query UK. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query UK. Sort by date Show all posts

Five UK & US Sites Hacked by Hitcher

BlackBerry blog hacked TriCk (TeaMp0isoN)

Research In Motion found its official BlackBerry blog hacked Tuesday morning, following statements the company made regarding the London riots. Rioters used RIM’s BlackBerry Messenger to communicate far more than using other social networks like Twitter or Facebook. In response to the riots, RIM tweeted, “We feel for those impacted by the riots in London. We have engaged with the authorities to assist in any way we can.”
As we noted yesterday, that seems to indicate that BBM isn’t as private as some rioters may have hoped. In response, a group calling itself TeaMp0isoN hacked the publicly facing Inside BlackBerry blog. The site is now down.
Before the site went down, we were able to capture the following message from the hackers:



Hacked Site:-

http://blogs.blackberry.com/



Mirror Link:-
http://www.zone-h.org/mirror/id/14614130


This hack is a response to this statement by RIM:-

    “We feel for those impacted by this weekend’s riots in London. We have engaged with the authorities to assist in any way we can. As in all markets around the world Where BlackBerry is available, we cooperate with local telecommunications operators, law enforcement and regulatory officials. Similar to other technology providers in the UK we comply with The Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act and co-operate fully with the Home Office and UK police forces.”

    Dear Rim;
    You Will _NOT_ assist the UK Police because if u do innocent members of the public who were at the wrong place at the wrong time and owned a blackberry will get charged for no reason at all, the Police are looking to arrest as many people as possible to save themselves from embarrassment…. if you do assist the police by giving them chat logs, gps locations, customer information & access to peoples BlackBerryMessengers you will regret it, we have access to your database which includes your employees information; e.g – Addresses, Names, Phone Numbers etc. – now if u assist the police, we _WILL_ make this information public and pass it onto rioters…. do you really want a bunch of angry youths on your employees doorsteps? Think about it…. and don’t think that the police will protect your employees, the police can’t protect themselves let alone protect others….. if you make the wrong choice your database will be made public, save yourself the embarrassment and make the right choice. don’t be a puppet..

    p.s – we do not condone in innocent people being attacked in these riots nor do we condone in small businesses being looted, but we are all for the rioters that are engaging in attacks on the police and government…. and before anyone says “the blackberry employees are innocent” no they are not! They are the ones that would be assisting the police

    - TriCk – TeaMp0isoN -
    Greets To: iN^SaNe – Hex00010 – MLT – BlackHacker

    - Knowledge is Power . . . . .

    #FuckTheFeds
     Twitter: @TeaMp0isoN_..."

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XSS in Corporateinformation.com & UK Gov. site

Secrious XSS vulnerability found by Soumyabrata (Indian Hacker) oncorporateinformation.com & data.gov.uk


 www.corporateinformation.com





www.data.gov.uk


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Security Issues Call for Disabling WebGL



Context Information Security a security consulting firm stated that the WebGL standard for the Web with which 3D-graphics could be turned on any PC running a suitable Web-browser was risky since it let the content in that browser to nearly straight away gain admission into the graphics hardware of the system. V3.co.uk published this on May 9, 2011.
Often the said graphics hardware isn't developed because of security reasons; therefore the associated API regards all software as trustworthy, while really that mayn't be so which puts the computer in danger of attack.
And when such an attack is executed, it can wholly stop the end-user from managing to access his PC thus resulting in the OS (operating system) to collapse via the proliferation of malware, or become benign to programs wherein driver code may've been erroneous leading to possible exploitable situations.
Incidentally, by designing dubious programs, online-crooks can execute DDoS (distributed denial-of-service) assaults alternatively, by intentionally drawing complicated three-dimensional geometry too that results in more time for GPU hardware to render. Actually, the objective of WebGL is for starting a 3D-API inside the browser after deriving it from an OpenGL, with this API being accessible via a JavaScript of a website that maybe employing it.
States Senior Security Consultant James Forshaw at Context, it's not difficult to make client DDoS assaults trivial, with solely the browser being impacted. Nevertheless, within the current instance, the assault wholly stops an end-user from gaining admission into his PC; consequently, making it significantly severe, adds Forshaw. V3.co.uk published this.
Actually a very familiar security problem affecting WebGL is the denial-of-service condition, which's even recognized within the latest standards documentation. Primarily due to the nearly straight admission into graphics hardware by the API derived from WebGL, it's feasible for designing dubious programs alternatively certain complicated 3D-geometry that's capable of making the hardware render only over a long time-frame, thus leading to the DDoS condition.
Eventually according to Forshaw, since research in WebGL is currently limited, Context believes that it can't yet be widely used instead IT managers and consumers require deactivating it within their browsers, thus reported V3.co.uk.

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Anonymous Threatened to Target British Surveillance Agency GCHQ

Anonymous Threatened to Target  British Surveillance agency GCHQ
Few weeks ago Anonymous performed massive denial of service attack to bring down British Prime Minister’s Office, Home Office & Ministry of Justice. In that attack they have declared that such scenario will be repeated on every Saturday. Here again hacker collective Anonymous threatened to continue cyber attacks on government websites again this weekend, this time they are specially focusing in on British surveillance agency GCHQ. A member of the group made a statement via Twitter (@Anon_central). The planned assault come after a recent spate of DoS attacks on UK government websites over the past few weekends. The attacks are part of the group’s “Operation Trial At Home”, which is protesting against the UK government’s extradition treaties with the US, which it sees as unfair.
“#Anonymous #OpTrialAtHome Plan #DDoS on GCHQ on Saturday 21st April at 8pm BST & 3pm EDT,” Anonymous said in a tweet. “@AnonAteam is asking all Anons to fire lazers at http://ghcq.gov.uk.” It said it supports three British citizens involved in extradition to the US: Gary McKinnon, wanted for seven counts of hacking NASA and Pentagon computers; Richard O’Dwyer, alleged to have infringed copyright in the US and Christopher Tappin, wanted in the US for alleged arm dealing. 






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UK Implements Cyber Security Strategy (CyberCriminals Have To Face Internet Ban)


Newly implemented UK Cyber Security Strategy causes a lot for Cyber criminals. Cyber-stalkers, fraudsters and other criminals could be banned from accessing the internet, under proposals being considered by the Ministry of Justice and the Home Office. The government may broaden the scope of how it can enforce Serious Crime Prevention Orders to block criminals, sex offenders and others from accessing the internet, it announced on Friday.
"The Ministry of Justice and the Home Office will consider and scope the development of a new wayof enforcing these orders, using 'cyber-tags' which are triggered by the offender breaching the conditions that have been put on their internet use, and which will automatically inform the police or probation service," the government wrote in the strategy document. "If the approach shows promise we will look at expanding cyber-sanctions to a wider group of offenders."

To Download The UK Cyber Security Strategy PDF Click Here


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ICO gives site operators a year to comply with new cookie law



Website operators have a year to change the way they use cookies to comply with new laws, the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) has said. Those that make no effort to change could still face sanctions, though, the ICO said. From tomorrow, UK laws based on the EU's Privacy and Electronic Communications Directive will force websites to obtain users' consent in order to store cookies. Cookies are small text files that record user activity on websites. The ICO, the UK's data protection regulator, has given most operators of consumer websites a year's grace before serious enforcement of the new laws will begin. "Although there isn’t a formal transitional period in the Regulations, the government has said they don’t expect the ICO to enforce this new rule straight away," Christopher Graham, the Information Commissioner, said in a statement. "So we’re giving businesses and organisations up to one year to get their house in order. This does not let everyone off the hook. Those who choose to do nothing will have their lack of action taken into account when we begin formal enforcement of the rules," Graham said. The ICO said it was allowing the exemption period because there was no adequate technical solution within browser settings to obtain user consent to cookies. The Government has said it is working with browser manufacturers to establish a new system for gaining user consent through their settings. "Browser settings giving individuals more control over cookies will be an important contributor to a solution," said Graham. The ICO said it would respond to complaints about cookies during the exemption period by advising website owners how to comply with the new Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations, an ICO guide on how it will enforce the regulations said. "[The Information Commissioner] will provide advice to the organisation concerned on the requirements of the law and how they might comply," the ICO enforcement guide (7-page / 132KB PDF) said. "Where he considers it appropriate, and particularly as May 2012 approaches, he will also ask organisations to explain to him the steps they are taking to ensure that they will in fact be in a position to comply by May 2012," the guide said. The ICO recently published guidance on how organisations can comply with the new regulations. It suggested a variety of options websites could use to gain user consent, including prompting users with pop-up questions about their consent to cookies or writing cookie consent into terms and conditions users have to agree to when registering with a site. Website features, such as videos, that remember how users personalise their interaction, could also determine user consent, the ICO said. The Information Commissioner said the ICO website now operates a header giving users the choice how to manage their cookies but said that it may not be an appropriate solution for other websites. "We’ve decided to place a header bar on our website giving users information about the cookies we use and choices about how to manage them," Christopher Graham said in the ICO press release. "I am not saying that other websites should necessarily do the same. Every website is different and prescriptive and universal ‘to do’ lists would only hinder rather than help businesses to find a solution that works best for them and their customers," Graham said. Under the new UK regulations the ICO has been given extra powers to impose penalties of up to £500,000 on websites that breach the new regulations, the ICO enforcement guide says. The ICO can also investigate the measures taken by website providers to safeguard the security of public electronic communications, investigate and fine websites depending on how they deal with personal data breaches and can demand information about users to investigate how a website complies with the new regulations, the ICO enforcement guide says. "Along with the power to impose financial penalties on telecoms and internet companies who fail to notify us about their data breaches, we will also have stronger powers to investigate the businesses behind nuisance marketing calls and spam texts," Christopher Graham, Information Commissioner, said in the ICO press release. "Tackling the businesses that make money from this is a challenge, but these new powers will give us access to more of the information we need to do the job," Graham said. 

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Hackgamers.co.uk hacked by Xieru


Hacking into hackers site is became quite normal now a days. Same things repeated again. this time victim is Hackgamers's site of UK. The website get hacked by Virtual Phantom (Xieru)
Hacked Site:-
http://hackgamers.co.uk/

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Cyber criminals could be costing New Zealanders $4.7 billion per year


Cyber criminals could be costing New Zealanders $4.7 billion per year, with businesses taking most of the hit, according to AVG.

The company's 'security evangelist' Lloyd Borrett cited the findings of a UK report by the Office of Cyber Security and Information Assurance, and found that extrapolating the UK statistics by New Zealand's GDP and population resulted in a loss of $4.7 billion.

The report found that in the UK, £27 billion are lost to cyber criminals every year, with businesses bearing £22 billion of the cost.

In Australia the extrapolated figure was AUD$22 billion per year.

“The whole pubs, clubs, cafe industry in Australia is only $11 billion," Borrett said.

Merchants took most of the hit because of credit card fraud. The customer would usually call the credit card company and cancel any illegitimate transactions, so it was businesses that lost money.

"Now, a merchant, of course you've got to educate them to be aware and sophisticated and you say, 'well, don't deal with someone in Ghana'," Borrett said.

"I've set up online shops for a few small businesses, and you tell them, 'well, we just won't deal with anyone from those countries'."

The cyber crime industry was "bigger than the drug industry", Borrett said, and had ties to the mafia and organised crime.

NetSafe executive director Martin Cocker said New Zealand was becoming more at risk of cyber crime as it was attempting to become a "digital economy" through ultra-fast broadband.

"For us, the interesting question is 'how ready is New Zealand to become a digital society?'" Cocker said.

"Are small businesses aware of what they're getting themselves into when they move to e-commerce? Are consumers really aware of the risks that they face? The answer from the research is no, not really."

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Anonymous Hit Ministry of Justice & British Home Office Over Protest Against Assange Case

Anonymous Hit Ministry of Justice & British Home Office Over Protest Against Assange Case

Hacker collective Anonymous again stand for Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. This time hackers affiliated with Anonymous have targeted a few British government websites in the last 24 hours. The hacker group claimed responsibility on Twitter for the denial-of-service attacks which affected the Ministry of Justice and the Home Office"Justice.gov.uk seems to be offline. Odd. #Anonymous #Assange," said a posting on the group's Twitter website at the time of the attacks on Monday night. It later added: "Sorry for the delay Forgot to say no3 #TangoDown aprox 1 hour ago ;) number10.gov.uk/ #OpFreeAssange."
The incident comes as the Wikileaks founder is staying at Ecuador's embassy in London to avoid extradition to Sweden over sex assault claims, which he denies. He was granted asylum by Ecuador last week. He has been at the embassy since June and on Sunday addressed crowds of his supporters from the embassy's balcony, thanking Ecuador and other South American countries for their support. The UK has insisted it is obliged to extradite Mr Assange, 41, and wants a "diplomatic solution", making clear that Mr Assange will be arrested if he leaves the embassy.
Downing Street, the office of Prime Minister David Cameron, and the Home Office said attempts to disrupt the work of their sites had failed or caused minor problems, although the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) said the attack had affected its website. This is not the very first time, few months ago (April, This year) Anonymous engaged massive cyber attack which bring down British Prime Minister’s Office, Home Office & Ministry of Justice. We would also like to remind you another instance, where both members of the hacktivist group, Anonymous and supporters of Julian Assange stood together outside of the Supreme Court in London to protest against the extradition of the Wikileaks founder to Sweden. 


-Source (BBC & Reuters) 







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Hackers Breached The Security System of Ministry of Defence (MoD)

Hackers Breached The Security System of Ministry of Defence (MoD) 

Couple of days ago we have seen  Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) had become the victim of denial of service attack. And now its the turn of MoD. The military's head of cyber-security has revealed that hackers have managed to breach some of the top secret systems within the Ministry of Defence (MoD). Major General Jonathan Shaw told - "The number of serious incidents is quite small, but it is there," he said. "And those are the ones we know about. The likelihood is there are problems in there we don't know about." Government computer systems come under daily attack, but though Shaw would not say how or by whom, this is the first admission that the MoD's own systems have been breached.
A former director of UK special forces, Shaw, 54, said he thought the military could learn a trick or two from firms such as Facebook. The company has a "white hat" programme in which hackers are paid rewards for informing them when they have found a security vulnerability.
Nine people in the UK have been paid a total of $11,000 for working with Facebook. Shaw said this was the kind of "waacky idea we need to bring in".
Shaw has spent the last year reviewing the MoD's approach to cyber-security, and the kind of cyber-capability the military will need in the future.
He says next year's MoD budget is expected to include new money for cyber-defence – an acknowledgment that even during a time of redundancies and squeezed budgets, this is now a priority.
The general said the MoD wasn't "doing badly … but we could do a hell of a lot better. We will get there, but we will have to do it fast. I think it was a surprise to people this year quite how vulnerable we are, which is why the measures have survived so long in the [budget] because people have become aware of the vulnerabilities and are taking them seriously." 
Shaw said the number of attacks was "still on an upward curve … and the pace of change is unrelenting". In his last interview before retiring, Shaw said the UK had to develop an array of its own cyber-weapons because it was impossible to create entirely secure computer systems.



-Source (Guardian)





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Jonathan Millican - 19 Years Old U.K. Student Won GCHQ "Cyber Security Champion” Award

Jonathan Millican - 19 Years Old U.K. Student Won GCHQ "Cyber Security Champion” Award
Jonathan Millican, a 19 years old U.K. student has won the "Cyber Security Champion” after winning a competition showcasing Internet security intelligence. He has been awarded after a six-month-long challenge designed to attract talented people to the cyber defense industry. Judges at the competition said Millican had demonstrated knowledge “years beyond his time” of the subject.
He won the competition after taking part in a final series of challenges hosted by HP Labs, which pitted six five-person teams against each other on Saturday.
During the competition, teams had to advise a start-up company on how to best protect itself from hackers, and then reconfigure a computer network during a 15-minute long simulated attack. Although Millican’s team was beaten by a rival, judges determined that he deserved the top prize.
“He showed great leadership, strong technical abilities and also demonstrated that he understood the impact what he was doing would have on a business,” Adam Thompson, the chief judge who works for Hewlett Packard’s security team, told Media.
The competition was sponsored by the intelligence agency GCHQ, as well as telecoms giant BT, defense firm Cassidian and security technology maker Qinetiq. Millican has been offered a paid follow-up masters degree at Royal Holloway, University of London. He has also been invited to visit communications intelligence agency GCHQ’s Cheltenham base. Baroness Pauline Neville-Jones, the competition’s patron and the Prime Minister’s special representative to business on cybersecurity, said she hopes events like this would encourage children to put their computer skills to constructive use. Millican said he was most interested in the challenges posed by complex cyber attacks, like the Stuxnet work that is notorious for attacking Iran’s nuclear systems.

-Source (RedOrbit)



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Lulzsec may be Officially Disbanded, But FBI is In Search of Lulzsec


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Criminals and foreign spy agencies launched more than 1,000 cyber attacks on the MOD last year





Criminals and foreign spy agencies launched more than 1,000 cyber attacks on the Ministry of Defence last year in an effort to steal secrets and disrupt services, Liam Fox has revealed.
In a speech on Tuesday night, the defence secretary laid out the growing threat to the country from cyberspace, saying that government departments were now under sustained attack.
He underlined the problem by saying that "across the core defence networks there were an average of over a million security alerts every day".
These comprise mainly of spam emails that are blocked before entering government computer systems. But many turn out to be deliberate attempts to infiltrate and steal from the MoD's computer systems.
Last week the Guardian revealed that the UK is now developing a cyber weapons programme to give ministers an attacking capability in cyberspace.
It also emerged that the FBI is investigating allegations that the Google mail accounts of senior US government officials have been attacked by Chinese hackers.
In his speech, Fox set out why the government had committed an extra £650m for cyber security in last year's Strategic Defence and Security Review. He also warned more would need to be done to protect the UK's core infrastructure from cyber attack.
"Between 2009 and 2010, security incidents more than doubled," he said: "Was this in Afghanistan? No. This was in cyberspace and the target was the MoD. I and my senior colleagues are routinely alerted to incidents that could have had severe consequences if they'd not been stopped.
"Our systems are targeted by criminals, foreign intelligence services and other malicious actors seeking to exploit our people, corrupt our systems and steal information.

"To give you an idea of the challenge, last year we in the MoD blocked and investigated over 1,000 potentially serious attacks. "
Fox described it as the "war of the invisible enemy" and said the boundaries between government, business and every individual internet user were becoming blurred."This threat is growing in scale and sophistication. My department is a prime target. Across the core defence networks there were an average of over a million security alerts every day."
He said the opening of a new Global Operations and Security and Control Centre would help to coordinate the Whitehall response to cyber attacks, but conceded that government could not do this alone.
"We now see weekly reports of cyber attacks against businesses, institutions and networks used by people going about their daily lives," he said. "The cost to the UK economy of cyber crime is estimated to be in the region of £27bn a year and rising. These are attacks against the whole fabric of our society.
"There is no Maginot Line in cyber space ... our national intellectual property in defence and security industries is at risk from a systematic marauding. Not only could it severely affect the future success of British industry, our economic advantage, and the country's financial recovery, but also directly impacts upon our national security today."
Last week, the US government said it was intending to rewrite its military rule book to make cyber-attacks a possible act of war. In May, the chancellor George Osborne said foreign intelligence agencies were carrying out cyber-attacks on the Treasury, targeting it with programs designed to steal information.
Some experts have warned against government's over-exaggerating the problems in cyberspace, noting that 80 per cent of all such attacks can be thwarted with better computer 'hygiene' – such as people using less obvious passwords. 

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Suspected LulzSec and Anonymous Members Got Busted

Four men have been arrested in separate parts of the UK by police investigating the hacker groups Anonymous and LulzSec. The suspects - from Doncaster, Warminster, Northampton and London - are being questioned by Scotland Yard's e-Crime unit. Their arrests are part of a wider operation involving UK law enforcement and the FBI. At the same time, 14 suspected members of Anonymous appeared in a US court.
Authorities around the world have been rounding up suspects following a wave of attacks by both groups on major corporations and government institutions.
Amazon, PayPal, the CIA, US Senate and the UK's Serious Organised Crime Agency have all suffered either intrusions or denial of service attacks, designed to take their websites offline.


Mass arrests:-

In the latest round of British arrests, police detained 20-year-old Christopher Weatherhead from Northampton and 26-year-old Ashley Rhodes from Kennington, near London. The pair are due to appear at Westminster Magistrates Court on 7 September. Detectives also arrested a 24-year-old man from Doncaster, and a 20-year-old from Wiltshire for conspiring to commit offences under the Computer Misuse Act 1990. In the United States, a mass court appearance saw 14 suspected Anonymous members appear before a judge in San Jose, California. All of them denied being involved in a denial of service attack on PayPal's website in December 2010. Anonymous had publicly declared its intent to target both PayPal and Amazon for, what the group perceived as, their complicity in isolating whistle blowing website Wikileaks. Following the leaking of confidential US State Department memos, PayPal stopped processing donations to Wikileaks, while Amazon kicked the site off its web hosting service.

-News Source (BBC)

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LulzSec Hacker Ryan Sent Back To Prison For Contacting Sabu

LulzSec Hacker Ryan Sent Back To Prison For Contacting Sabu (Violation of His Bail Agreement)

Former Lulzsec hacker Ryan Cleary from Essex, England sent back to jail for violating court's conditions. Few days ago Ryan has been granted bail by Westminster magistrates until a hearing at Southwark Crown Court on 11 May. He has been charged of conspiring with three British teenagers to bring down the websites of the CIA and the UK's Serious Organized Crime Agency. Ryan was also accused of attacks on the NHS and News International, publisher of the Sun, as well as police authorities in the UK and US. Court granted his bail on condition that he does not access or have in his possession any device that could access the Internet. But it has been found that he tried to make contact with none other than LulzSec leader Hector Xavier Monsegur aka "Sabu". That was a direct violation of his bail agreement, which dictated that Cleary was to have no access to the Internet whatsoever. London's Metropolitan Police say they rearrested Cleary on March 5, the day before the FBI revealed Sabu's identity, and that "the party boy of the projects" had been eagerly spilling the beans on his fellow hackers. According to Cleary's lawyer, the teen is being held at Chelmsford Prison north of London, awaiting a court appearance in May. 
Sabu was recently revealed to have betrayed LulzSec members, and associated Anonymous hacktivists, by secretly working for the FBI for many months.




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Credit card companies broke European law


Please respect FT.com's ts&cs and copyright policy which allow you to: share links; copy content for personal use; & redistribute limited extracts. Credit card companies have been accused of taking advantage of a European law designed to protect cash-strapped borrowers from obtaining easy credit, by promoting eye-catching deals for which many consumers will be ineligible.
The number of credit cards that charge no interest to customers who switch provider is at a record high. But the number of applicants able to take advantage of the deals is falling, according to a financial research firm, after the introduction of a European Union consumer credit directive this year.
Please respect FT.com's ts&cs and copyright policy which allow you to: share links; copy content for personal use; & redistribute limited extracts. Instead, consumer groups say credit providers are using the rates as a form of advertising. “Offering lengthy 0 per cent deals is a way to generate massive free advertising exposure via the best-buy tables,” Andrew Hagger, of financial website Moneynet, said.
“It’s cheap for credit companies to borrow money at the moment and the law means they are legally allowed to decline more applications. That’s why we’re seeing a staggering number of deals.”
The number of credit cards offering an interest-free balance transfer term of at least 12 months has more than doubled in the past two years to 54. But only about half of the customers whose applications are accepted must be offered these deals. Under the previous system, providers were required to give two-thirds of successful applicants the advertised rate. Now they can advertise rates that are handed out to just 51 per cent of customers. The law was intended to harmonise consumer credit laws across the EU, creating one market for retail financial services where consumers could shop around for the best deals outside their own country.
Banks had warned in 2007 that if the rules were put into practice the number of borrowers struggling to obtain a loan would rise. The British Bankers’ Association predicted that as many as 1.7m consumers would be unable to access credit or would find that the amount they could borrow would be limited if the directive was introduced. The UK Cards Association said the impact of the directive had been “limited” and that the UK credit card market continued to be highly competitive. Interest rates on credit cards are at the highest level for 13 years. Despite a period of low base interest rates, providers have pushed up rates to more than 19 per cent on average, after changes to the way that credit card debts are repaid. Consumers now pay off the most expensive debt first, which has reduced the revenue available from cards for providers.
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2011. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web.   

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Pirate Bay & WikiLeaks Goes Offline After Prolonged Denial of Service Attack

Pirate Bay & WikiLeaks Goes Offline After Prolonged Denial of Service Attack
 
Most popular and controversial file sharing site "The Pirate Bay" faced a prolonged distributed denial of service which interrupts the service. In their official Facebook page confirmed the attack. DDoS attack left the site largely inaccessible for the last 24 hours, with only intermittent service in the UK. The Pirate Bay took to its Facebook page to confirm the attack, saying that it did not know who was behind it, although it ‘had its suspicions’. There had initially been speculation that the attack on The Pirate Bay was initiated as an act of revenge by the Anonymous hacker collective after members of The Pirate Bay criticised Anonymous for organizing DDoS attacks on UK internet service provider (ISP) Virgin Media for blocking access to The Pirate Bay. The Pirate Bay has said, however, that Anonymous is not to blame for the attack on its site.
Meanwhile, a former Anonymous member by the name of AnonNyre has claimed responsibility for DDoSing the Pirate Bay site. There is no evidence though to confirm that AnonNyre was actually behind the attacks. 

Not only TPB, but also Wikileaks official website faced massive distributed denial of service attack which hampers the site for 72 long hours. According to official twitter of Wikileaks "WikiLeaks has been under sustained DDOS attacks over the last 72 hours..."  
This not the first time, before this Wikileaks have faced cyber attack and an Anonymous member took responsibility of that Attack on Wikileaks website. That  time the attacker executed a massive Denial of Service while using newly developed tool #refref. In an exlusive report by Corero Network Security said the attack on Wikileaks site was one of the largest DDoS attack ever took place in 2011. But still it is not clear if there is any connection between the two incidents. 





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Anonymous Bring Down The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO)

Anonymous Bring Down The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) Official Site
Hacktivist group Anonymous continuing massive denial of service of attack on the data protection watchdog's website. The tweets, which were published by the @UKAnonymous2012 account, claim the attack is part of a protest by the group at the handling of the Leveson Inquiry.  Incidentally, the Leveson Inquiry’s website has also been the target of DDoS attacks by Anonymous this week.
The Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) has confirmed that it’s still dealing with the fallout from a suspected Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attack on its website.In a statement sent to IT Pro, the data watchdog said access to the site has been disrupted over the last several days because of the attack. “The website itself has not been damaged, but people have been unable to access it. We provide a public facing website which contains no sensitive information,” the statement said. “We regret this disruption to our service and we are working to bring the website back online as soon as possible.” 
Like ICO couple of weeks ago we have seen similar attack on the official website of UK's Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA) that time also the experts suspected that Anonymous was behind the attack and the reason of that hack was to protest Supreme Court's decession on blocking The Pirate Bay in UK.





-Source (IT Pro)



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Lady Gaga’s website hacked & Fans' data Stolen By SwagSec (US Hacker)


Pop star Lady Gaga called in police after her website was hacked, resulting in the theft of thousands of names and email addresses.
Mirror.co.uk reports that Gaga's Britain website was hacked by US cyber attackers SwagSec, prompting her record label Universal to take urgent action.

"She's upset and hopes police get to the bottom of how this was allowed to happen," said a source. The cyber attack happened on June 27 but those responsible didn't make the information public until this week.
The hackers, who also issued a death threat against the singer, bizarrely branded her homophobic.
"The hackers took a content database dump from www.ladygaga.co.uk and a section of email, first name and last name records were accessed. There were no passwords or financial information taken," said a spokesperson from Universal label.

"We take this very seriously and have put in place additional measures to protect personally identifiable information. All those affected have been advised," the source added.

SwagSec have also targeted other Universal artists recently including Amy Winehouse and Justin Bieber.

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