Thanks for clarifying. I noticed that too.
Update: The Jester claims he did not take it down. It's another hacker called Oneiroi. Geez... Cyber World War I
This also looks like a gateway for other hackers to openly attack other sites and claim it was lulsec.
Thanks for clarifying. I noticed that too.
Lulzsec retiring after 50 days of mayhem: http://pastebin.com/1znEGmHa
Despite their reasoning, I'm guessing it's more to do with other hackers/police agencies getting close.
Or, it could be another joke/attention grab/troll job. We'll see
A-team does some serious ownage http://pastebin.com/raw.php?i=iVujX4TR
the lulz group included a tranny (laurelai)So we've been tracking and infiltrating these kids since the gawker hack. We have the D0x (as they call it)
on everyone except Sabu and Kayla. First we'll go with the kid who did the gawker hack: Uncommon.![]()
Looks like the above is what broke the camel's back. Good reading
Last edited by symple19; 06-26-2011 at 04:48 AM.
Kinda sad this may be over. Was hugely entertaining.
Anyway, their last leak is outlined here.
LulzSec, the hacker group who have claimed responsibility for many of the high profile attacks on gaming companies, publishers, and even the CIA, have declared their work is done, their time is up, and they’re off. Apparently it was always intended to be a 50 day voyage aboard their Lulzboat, and it has come to an end. They believe they have revitalised the Antisec Movement, and entertained themselves along the way. Which they claim, albeit in hindsight, was always their goal. But whatever their reasons, their goodbye comes with perhaps their biggest release of data yet. It’s going to be messy. This one contains 550,000 Battlefield Heroes Beta users’ details, and the details of 50,000 users from “random gaming forums”.Here's the torrent link for their final releases: http://thepiratebay.org/torrent/6495523/50_Days_of_LulzTheir final statement comes with a final release, and it’s not a happy one for many. It contains the following:
booty/AOL internal data.txt 63.6 KiB
booty/AT&T internal data.rar 314.59 MiB
booty/Battlefield Heroes Beta (550k users).csv 24.67 MiB
booty/FBI being silly.txt 3.82 KiB
booty/Hackforums.net (200k users).sql 111.2 MiB
booty/Nato-bookshop.org (12k users).csv 941.8 KiB
booty/Office networks of corporations.txt 3.87 KiB
booty/Private Investigator Emails.txt 2.52 KiB
booty/Random gaming forums (50k users).txt 6.08 MiB
booty/Silly routers.txt 67.7 KiB
booty/navy.mil owned.png
Some pastebins of said releases
Silly routers:
http://pastebin.com/ennsYDM5
Private Investigators:
http://pastebin.com/BPBAcTxp
FBI Being Silly:
http://pastebin.com/hCnvTy0z
AOL Internal Data:
http://pastebin.com/08zJHQeA
60k of the Battlefield Hero Hashes Cracked
http://pastebin.com/vdYNFWP4
http://pastebin.com/cmjKGfE1
http://pastebin.com/HuiY03WC
10k hackforum hashes cracked
http://pastebin.com/7T9MTUMY
Last edited by symple19; 06-26-2011 at 05:30 AM.
(Supposedly) A few of the "random gaming sites" from which they harvested user info:
http://www.egamingsupply.com/
http://www.yougamers.com/
http://www.sigames.com/
http://forum.vces.net/
Here is another resource to check the integrity of your email/password:
https://shouldichangemypassword.com/
ShouldIChangeMyPassword.com has been created to help the average person check if their password(s) may have been compromised and need to be changed.
This site uses a number of databases that have been released by hackers to the public. No passwords are stored in the ShouldIChangeMyPassword.com database.
You're not this dumb, are you?
If you are, please send me all your passwords in a private message. I swear no password will be stored, kthx
you don't have to give them your password, genius![]()
http://webbeat.tv/website-of-the-day...e-my-password/
you don't give them your password, you just enter your e-mail and it cross references it against databases that have been released by hackers
And here's an article from the NYtimes which also recommends it http://gadgetwise.blogs.nytimes.com/...e-been-hacked/. kthnxbai
This has just been re ed.
An conveniently adds it to a few select mailing lists![]()
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