Friday 3 February 2012

Anonymous 'intercept FBI and Scotland Yard phone call'






Hacking network Anonymous has released a recording of a conference call between the FBI and UK police in which they discuss efforts against hacking.
The conversation covers the tracking of Anonymous and other splinter groups, dates of planned arrests and details of evidence held by police.
Anonymous also published an email, apparently from the FBI, showing the email addresses of call participants.
The FBI confirmed the intercept and said it was hunting those responsible.
"The information was intended for law enforcement officers only and was illegally obtained. A criminal investigation is under way to identify and hold accountable those responsible," it said in a statement.
British police at Scotland Yard said they were working on a statement.
A comment on one of the Twitter accounts linked to Anonymous,AnonymousIRC, said: "The FBI might be curious how we're able to continuously read their internal comms for some time now."
Correspondents say the release of the phone call and email addresses will be highly embarrassing for the authorities.
Greek attack
According to the alleged email, the 17-minute phone call took place on 17 January. It was unclear how Anonymous had managed to obtain the recording.

In the call, British and American voices, said to be those of police and FBI agents, discuss the names of some of the people they were tracking and plans for legal action.
The email was sent to law enforcement officials in the US, UK, Sweden, Ireland and other countries, inviting them to "discuss the on-going investigations related to Anonymous, Lulzsec, Antisec, and other associated splinter groups".
Usernames are included but some of the real names of people being investigated appear to have been bleeped out.
Among those discussed are two British men, Ryan Cleary and Jake Davis, who are accused of being behind cyber attacks in the US and UK.
The police also refer to a 15-year-old who is alleged to have been behind a hack of online gaming site Steam, where the identities and credit card details of thousands of users were accessed.
A Twitter user going by the same name has since posted online he has not yet been arrested.
One of the British voices on the recording says UK police have made mistakes in previous investigations.
Anonymous is a loose collective of hackers, anarchists and pranksters who have targeted the websites of a range of governments, companies, law enforcement agencies and individuals in recent years.
Also on Friday, hackers operating under the Anonymous name took over the website of Greece's justice ministry, prompting officials to take the site down.
Hackers said the action was a protest against Greece's signing of a global copyright treaty and the government's handling of the economic crisis.
The website was replaced with a video of a figure wearing the symbolic white mask of Anonymous supporters, saying: "Democracy was given birth in your country but you have killed it."

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