Iran Military Forum







Author Topic: Iran and cyber war  (Read 5567 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Catsoo

  • Global Moderator
  • سرهنگ دوم
  • *
  • Posts: 5545
  • Respect: +310
Iran and cyber war
« on: January 19, 2011, 12:19:45 AM »
0
Florida Community Websites Targeted By Pro-Iran Hackers

Published January 18, 2011
     



The unassuming Website for the town of Hillsboro Beach, Florida, appears to have been attacked by Iranian hackers.

townofhillsborobeach.com

The unassuming Website for the town of Hillsboro Beach, Florida, appears to have been attacked by Iranian hackers.

Apparent renegade pro-Iranian hackers have targeted beach communities in Florida.

The homepages for the small town of Hillsboro Beach and the community of North Miami have been targeted by hackers in recent days. The website for Hilllsboro Beach still showed the effects of the security breach Tuesday, prominently displaying a picture of Iran, the flag of the country, and the mysterious words "MCSM Iran Hacking."

Town officials were unclear whether the hacks were the work of a local prankster or if the Iranian government has it in for them. According to town clerk Jean-Marie Mark, the image showed up a week ago on the site. Web administrators were able to remove it by Friday, but the image resurfaced over the weekend, reported the Florida Sun Sentinel.

"If I shut it down, it will cut off e-mail access to our employees," Mark told the Miami Herald. "It's frustrating."

In North Miami, public information officer Pam Solomon said the government had managed to clean up its website. Solomon told the Herald that this weekend's security breach was the latest in a string of hacking incidents.

Neither official returned FoxNews.com calls for additional information.

Read more at the Florida Sun Sentinel.

Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/scitech/2011/01/18/florida-communitys-website-targeted-iranian-hackers/#ixzz1BQp4WcIX


« Last Edit: April 24, 2012, 07:44:03 PM by Catsoo »

Offline MO_SOBOH

  • سرهنگ
  • *
  • Posts: 6063
  • ps
  • ONLY FREE MEN CAN NEGOTIATE!
  • Respect: +141
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #1 on: January 19, 2011, 12:35:28 PM »
0
why attack this website? its kinda weird? could it be a smear campaign?
I am a Muslim, kill me and call it COLLATERAL DAMAGE!
Imprison me and call it SECURITY MEASURE!
Exile my people en mass and call it NEW MIDDLE EAST!
Rob my resources call it, PROGRESS!
Corrupt my Leaders call it DEMOCRACY!

Offline Ruhollah

  • سروان
  • *
  • Posts: 2528
  • 00
  • We are armed twice if we fight with faith - Plato
  • Respect: +9
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #2 on: January 19, 2011, 12:47:53 PM »
0
It is most probably a more localized hacker or a group of hackers playing a prank. In the hacking arena, it is quiet simple to use any kind of symbolism, such as a national flag, to assume a false identity or source. On the other hand, kudos to Faux News for their ideological consistency in presenting a most unsurprising and expected report heading.   
"My Lord, grant me success in struggling during failure, in having patience in disappointment, in going alone, in Jihad without weapons, in working without pay, in making sacrifice in silence, in having religious belief in the world, in having ideology without popular traditions, in having faith without pretensions, non-conformity without immaturity, beauty without physical appearance, loneliness in the crowd, and loving without the beloved knowing about it. My Lord, You teach me how to live; I shall learn how to die."
- Ali Shariati

Offline MO_SOBOH

  • سرهنگ
  • *
  • Posts: 6063
  • ps
  • ONLY FREE MEN CAN NEGOTIATE!
  • Respect: +141
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #3 on: January 19, 2011, 12:50:48 PM »
0
It is most probably a more localized hacker or a group of hackers playing a prank. In the hacking arena, it is quiet simple to use any kind of symbolism, such as a national flag, to assume a false identity or source. On the other hand, kudos to Faux News for their ideological consistency in presenting a most unsurprising and expected report heading.   
what you said makes more sense!

Offline Catsoo

  • Global Moderator
  • سرهنگ دوم
  • *
  • Posts: 5545
  • Respect: +310
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #4 on: January 20, 2011, 06:11:48 AM »
0
Iran seeks to boost corps of web watchers

(AP) – 13 hours ago

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran's top police chief envisions a new beat for his forces: patrolling cyberspace.

"There is no time to wait," Gen. Ismail Ahmadi Moghaddam said last week at the opening of a new police headquarters in the Shiite seminary city of Qom. "We will have cyber police all over Iran."

The first web watchdog squads are planned in Tehran this month — another step in Iran's rapidly expanding focus on the digital world as cyber warfare and online sleuthing take greater prominence with the Pentagon's new Cyber Command and the secrets spilled to WikiLeaks.

For Iranian authorities, mastering the intricacies of the web is seen as critical on two fronts: an offensive weapon against political opposition and a defensive shield to thwart cyber-attacks such as the Stuxnet computer worm that Iran said was aimed at sabotaging its uranium enrichment program.

It's part of what the Islamic Republic calls its "soft war" — which includes trying to curb Western cultural influences and gaining the upper hand in cyberspace against web-literate opposition groups.

But some experts question Iran's capabilities in the constantly evolving Net. They say Iran is hampered by the lack of homegrown computer innovation and its struggle to find competent programmers and hackers willing to work for the state.

"Without a robust domestic computer industry, it's doubtful Iran could develop significant cyber capabilities," said Derek Reveron, a professor of national security affairs at the U.S. Naval War College in Rhode Island.

Iran, however, appears to be investing significant resources to boost its cyber corps.

The Revolutionary Guard — Iran's military-industrial powerhouse — is believed linked to the secretive "Cyber Army" that emerged as a counter punch against the onslaught of opposition websites and blogs after the disputed re-election of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in 2009.

Some Iranian lawmakers are now reportedly seeking a sharp boost in funding and recruitment to bring more hackers into the Revolutionary Guards paramilitary Basij corps, which is far better known for its storm trooper role against protesters.

The suspected fingerprints of the Cyber Army have already turned up in defacements against Twitter, the Chinese search engine Baidu and TechCrunch Europe, a blog covering web startups and related news.

The Cyber Army also has been blamed for blocking reformist sites and even hacking into the website of Farsi1, a popular television channel based in Dubai and owned by an Afghan media tycoon and Rupert Murdoch's News Corp.

In October, a web security firm Seculert said its researchers believe the Cyber Army branched out to botnets, networks of infected PCs that have been hijacked from their owners — often without their knowledge — and can be used by hackers to spread malicious software.

"It's like second-generation jihadists" using computers instead of weapons, said Eldad Pardo, an Iranian affairs expert at Hebrew University in Jerusalem.

Iran could be fertile ground. Its many universities churn out some of the most computer-savvy graduates in the Middle East.

Iran's opposition has already shown its web flair with videos, online statements and tweets. One prolific hacker group possibly linked to Iran — known as the Ashiyane Digital Security Team — has gained a reputation by purportedly swiping at sites from the Chinese government to job postings in Penobscot, Maine, according to claims posted on the hacker bulletin board, www.zone-h.org.

This week, the home pages of Hillsboro Beach, Florida, were hacked by someone who posted an Iranian flag and the mysterious words "MCSM Iran Hacking."

Iran, meanwhile, is trying to bolster its firewalls after the Stuxnet code was found in programs involved in its nuclear program.

Iranian officials claim there were no setbacks in nuclear operations from the Stuxnet worm. But a November report by the U.N. nuclear agency said Iran's enrichment program was temporarily shut down in a possible link to the Stuxnet infiltration.

The origins of Stuxnet are unclear. But it's considered a highly sophisticated malware designed to attack industrial systems and could have been aimed at the centrifuges used in uranium enrichment. Washington and others worry that Iran could eventually produce nuclear material for warheads, but Iran insists it only seeks nuclear reactors for energy and research.

A secret U.S. diplomatic memo released this week by WikiLeaks — from a January 2010 meeting between German and U.S. officials — includes a recommendation that "covert sabotage," including explosions and computer hacking, "would be more effective than a military strike whose effects in the region could be devastating." The cable makes no direct mention of any specific acts.

But Iran's intelligence minister, Heidar Moslehi, claimed in October that programmers had neutralized Stuxnet because of their "domination of virtual networks."

It's impossible to accurately weigh Iran's statements. But it appears that Iran has taken some initial steps, including efforts to install a system that immediately flags possible cyber-attacks, said an Israel-based computer security expert, Shai Blitzbau.

"It can monitor in real time all the abnormal activity in the networks," said Blitzbau, technical director for Maglan Group, an Internet security firm with offices in Europe and Israel.

This, however, is mostly a standard move and unlikely to rattle any experienced hacker, experts say.

"It's a first response and a logical one by Iran," said Jeffrey Carr, a cyber intelligence expert and consultant to U.S. and other governments on cyber defenses. "But it doesn't really mean much to prevent attacks. It's the cyber equivalent to eating right, taking your vitamins and hoping you don't get sick."

The planned police units seem to be the next web offensive by Iran.

The country's main police chief, Ahmadi Moghaddam, gave few details in his announcement last week. But he pointed out the need to stamp out web-based "defamation and mischief" — a clear reference to opposition websites and blogs that often serve as the crucial sources of information and tips because of restrictions imposed on foreign journalists.

Opposition groups also have proven they are nimble, using proxy servers and other tactics to stay ahead of authorities.

Ehsan Ahrari, a Virginia-based political analyst who taught security studies at the National Defense University, said Iranian authorities seem to be rushing into cyber-warfare and policing efforts "in an almost panicked way" and without coordination.

"Such a chaotic environment becomes too fertile for external forces to infiltrate Iran's firewalls," he said. "Iran is indeed facing an uphill struggle. It is likely to close the technological gap, but it will take a long time."

Associated Press writer Josh Lederman in Jerusalem contributed to this report.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jV3KHNmnQT5is-05a1FN9BUYOnqw?docId=ef039f80e917425bacf30c06d2a8afec

Offline MO_SOBOH

  • سرهنگ
  • *
  • Posts: 6063
  • ps
  • ONLY FREE MEN CAN NEGOTIATE!
  • Respect: +141
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #5 on: January 20, 2011, 09:36:57 AM »
0
so our brothers are hard at work! excellent!

Offline Apollyon

  • گروهبان سوم
  • *
  • Posts: 966
  • al
  • animu mango
  • Respect: +51
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #6 on: January 20, 2011, 09:44:33 AM »
0
You'd have to be a moron to think this was an organized effort by any government. It was rogue pranksters or, I think much more likely, smear campaigns that the internet is already peppered with courtesy of the Zionist.

Iran seeks to boost corps of web watchers

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) — Iran's top police chief envisions a new beat for his forces: patrolling cyberspace.

This is a much needed step in the right direction. The way in which populations speak to each other directly is through the internet.

Not to mention, more importantly, a strong IT industry and cyber security (especially for businesses and factories and military or govt. institutions) is something related that can be easily homegrown, the industry of computer science is a growing field in which nations don't need a lot of outside support or technology.

"The sword is victorious over money, the master-will subdues again the plunderer-will. . . A power can be overthrown only by another power, not by a principle, and only one power that can confront money is left. Money is overthrown and abolished by blood. Life is alpha and omega . . . It is the fact of facts within the world-as-history."

- Oswald Spengler

Offline Catsoo

  • Global Moderator
  • سرهنگ دوم
  • *
  • Posts: 5545
  • Respect: +310
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #7 on: January 24, 2011, 05:11:12 AM »
0
Iranian Police Sets Up Cyber Force

TEHRAN (FNA)- Iran's Cyber Police started its work today to prevent espionage and sabotage activities through the internet, a police official announced on Sunday.
   

"The Cyber Police can prevent espionage and sabotage in Information Technology (IT) tools," Head of the Information Production and Exchange Department of the Law Enforcement Police General Seyed Kamal Hadianfar said.

Hadianfar reiterated that IT tools play an undeniable role in political, security, economic, trade, ethical and religious rivalries at the national and international levels.

He also underlined that given the people's growing interest in using the internet, the threats and opportunities presented by the IT now need to be attended more than before in the country, adding that the governments should have plans for confronting these threats and using these opportunities.

Earlier in 2009, Iran's Police Chief Brigadier General Esmail Ahmadi-Moqaddam had announced that the force plans to set up a 'cyber police' division to counter 'internet crimes'.

Ahmadi-Moqaddam said the unit would be tasked with monitoring organized cyber crimes on the internet.

Iran announced in March 2010 that it has arrested 30 individuals on charges of waging a US-backed cyber war against the country.

A statement issued by Tehran's Public and Revolutionary Court at the time said that following a series of complicated security operations in area of information and communication technology, the country's security forces have identified the most important US-backed organized networks of cyber war launched by the anti-revolutionary groups and arrested 30 suspects.

The statement added that the networks received US aids and served Washington through such anti-revolutionary groups as the Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization (MKO), monarchist groups and a number of other opposition groups.

It further said that Washington provided such anti-Islamic Republic groups and networks with 70 million US-made anti-filtering software only during the recent demonstrations in Tehran in a bid to help them wage a psychological war against the Iranian nation and government.

According to the statement, some of the charges leveled against these US-backed networks include establishment of an intelligence gathering network, specially to identify the country's nuclear scientists, provoking sedition and illegal demonstrations and rallies through releasing unreal and unfounded news and reports after the June presidential elections in the country and providing media and news support for the Jundollah terrorist group and the monarchist opposition groups.

http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=8911031262

Offline Mohsen

  • اش خور
  • *
  • Posts: 54
  • Respect: 0
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #8 on: January 24, 2011, 10:07:50 AM »
0
Least we're striking back after being pushed around.
Once Persian Always Persian.

Online ZamZam

  • گروهبان سوم
  • *
  • Posts: 910
  • ir
  • Respect: +57
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #9 on: January 25, 2011, 11:53:26 PM »
0
Least we're striking back after being pushed around.

strike iranium.com

Offline Nasr

  • سرباز عادى
  • *
  • Posts: 124
  • ir
  • Respect: 0
Iran's Cyber Army Hacks VOA, US-Backed Websites
« Reply #10 on: February 22, 2011, 12:47:35 PM »
0
TEHRAN (FNA)- An Iranian cyber group announced that it has hacked the Voice of America (VOA) and all its affiliated websites.

The move came in response to the false reports released by the VOA and other websites on the spread and progress of seditious moves in Iran.

VOA and its affiliates have long been supporting anti-Islamic Republic groups and sought to provoke unrests in Iran.

The Voice of America is the official external radio and television broadcasting service of the United States' federal government, but it acts as a complementary and media arm of the US spy agencies.

Its oversight entity is the Broadcasting Board of Governors (BBG).

Iran's Cyber Army said it has hacked the main VOA website as well as 95 other websites affiliated to the VOA.

The hackers have left the following message on the VOA website:

"Mrs. Clinton, Do you want to hear the voice of the oppressed nations?"

"The Islamic nations would no more be tricked by the US, and we want you to stop interfering in the Islamic countries."

http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=8912031064

.
« Last Edit: February 22, 2011, 12:50:38 PM by Nasr »

Offline MO_SOBOH

  • سرهنگ
  • *
  • Posts: 6063
  • ps
  • ONLY FREE MEN CAN NEGOTIATE!
  • Respect: +141
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #11 on: February 22, 2011, 12:53:45 PM »
0
TEHRAN (FNA)- An Iranian cyber group announced that it has hacked the Voice of America (VOA) and all its affiliated websites.

.


loud and clear!

Offline Nasr

  • سرباز عادى
  • *
  • Posts: 124
  • ir
  • Respect: 0
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #12 on: February 22, 2011, 02:22:11 PM »
0
yes but there is no list of the sites hacked.

loud and clear!


Offline Nasr

  • سرباز عادى
  • *
  • Posts: 124
  • ir
  • Respect: 0
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #13 on: February 22, 2011, 03:20:09 PM »
0
Iranian computer hackers on Monday hijacked the website of the Voice of America, replacing its Internet home page with a banner bearing an Iranian flag and an image of an AK-47 assault rifle.

The group called on Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to “hear the voice of oppressed nations.”

The banner stated that “we have proven that we can.”

The message called on the United States to “stop interfering in Islamic countries.”

It then listed more 90 websites of VOA it claimed has also been hacked.

A State Department spokesman could not be reached for comment.

An administration official said the group identified with the banner is known as the Iranian Cyber Army.

VOA operates a global network of news and information outlets that reflect official U.S. foreign policies. It broadcasts, through radio, television and the Internet to scores of nations around the world.

Little is known about the group. It was credited with hacking and defacing Twitter in December 2009, replacing the social networking site’s home page with a message that the site was hacked by the Iranian Cyber Army.

Cyber security specialists have said there are suspicions that the Cyber Army is part of the Iranian government after the hacker group was critical of the pro-democracy Green Movement in Iran.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2011/feb/21/iranian-hackers-break-voa-deface-web-sites/



Offline Ey_Baba

  • گروهبان سوم
  • *
  • Posts: 963
  • ir
  • Respect: +2
Iran's Cyber Army hacks VOA website
« Reply #14 on: February 22, 2011, 09:48:27 PM »
0
The Iranian Cyber Army has hacked into the Voice of America (VOA) website and 95 other affiliated websites in response to the propaganda campaign they have launched against Iran.




Quote
“The hacking of a VOA homepage by the Iranian Cyber Army and leaving a message on the site for the US secretary of state shows the power and capability of the [Islamic Revolution Guards] Corps (IRGC) in the cyber arena,” Ali Saeedi Shahroodi, the representative of Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei at the IRGC, was quoted by IRNA as saying.

The message calls on US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton to stop US interferences in the internal affairs of Islamic countries.

“We have proven that we can,” read the VOA homepage after being hacked by the Iranian Cyber Army.

Saeedi Shahroodi further said, “The US can no longer claim that it is the bellwether of software and cyber technology.”

“The US enjoys high capabilities in missile technology, including cruise missiles, nuclear arms and other weapons, but this is not the case when it comes to software and cyber technology,” he added.

He underlined that the IRGC should be able to counter any act of hacking or any attack by computer worms initiated by Washington.

NN/AKM/MGH
'




http://www.presstv.com/detail/166511.html
Emam Khomeini: My brothers, do not fear death. We are not scared of dying. In death there is life. Shed our blood! It will give our live strength. Kill us ! We will rise up even more !

rouz

  • Guest
Re: Iran's Cyber Army hacks VOA website
« Reply #15 on: February 22, 2011, 09:51:51 PM »
0
Awesome! Its still hacked...

Take that, great satan! Ha!

http://www.voanews.com/

Edit: They seem to have hacked all the VOA sites and not merely the Farsi channel. 
« Last Edit: February 22, 2011, 09:55:32 PM by Barberry »

Offline Islambouli

  • سرباز عادى
  • *
  • Posts: 261
  • I have killed Firoon, and I do not fear death.
  • Respect: +9
Re: Iran's Cyber Army hacks VOA website
« Reply #16 on: February 22, 2011, 10:04:02 PM »
0
It's not showing any evidence of hacking on my side. Wonder why that is?
All the prophets, with the exception of those of the Abrahamic line, turn immediately to the existing secular power and seek association with it, hoping to propogate their religion and message in society by means of that power. By contrast, all the prophets of the Abrahamic line, from Ibrahim down to the Prophet of Islam, proclaim their missions in the form of rebellion against the existing secular power.

Dr. Ali Shari'ati [On The Sociology of Islam]

Offline JohnnyTurk

  • استوار
  • *
  • Posts: 1873
  • ir
  • Respect: +1
Re: Iran's Cyber Army hacks VOA website
« Reply #17 on: February 22, 2011, 10:15:23 PM »
0
It's not showing any evidence of hacking on my side. Wonder why that is?

Me too, what's up?

Offline AminCo

  • سرهنگ دوم
  • *
  • Posts: 3694
  • 00
  • The journey & decision has been made.
  • Respect: +2
Re: Iran's Cyber Army hacks VOA website
« Reply #18 on: February 22, 2011, 10:21:13 PM »
0
Awesome! Its still hacked...

Take that, great satan! Ha!

http://www.voanews.com/

Edit: They seem to have hacked all the VOA sites and not merely the Farsi channel. 


The hackers' message, written in broken English, appeared on VOAnews.com pages in English, Persian, Azeri, Dari, Pashtun and Urdu, and on several subdomains.

Me too, what's up?

maybe they fixed it.

here what it was showing:
« Last Edit: February 22, 2011, 10:24:24 PM by AminCo »
  

rouz

  • Guest
Re: Iran's Cyber Army hacks VOA website
« Reply #19 on: February 22, 2011, 10:23:18 PM »
0
I have no idea how these things work, but I still see  the hacked site regardless of which VOA site I go to. Good stuff.


Offline AminCo

  • سرهنگ دوم
  • *
  • Posts: 3694
  • 00
  • The journey & decision has been made.
  • Respect: +2
Re: Iran's Cyber Army hacks VOA website
« Reply #20 on: February 22, 2011, 10:23:47 PM »
0
At the same time, the Iranian Cyber Army left a message on the VOA website claiming responsibility for hacking a long list of other sites, many of which appear to be related to the VOA:

amerikaninsesi.net
amerikaninsesi.org
amerikaovozi.com
amerikaovozi.org
amerikayidzayn.com
amerikayizayn.com
amerikiskhma.com
amerikisxma.com
artekultura.com
ashnadari.com
ashnapashto.com
chastime.com
darivoa.com
deewaradio.com
dengeamerika.com
dengiamerika.com
engo.mobi
glasamerike.net
glasnaamerika.com
goenglish.mobi
goenglish.us
golosameriki.us
holosus.us
insidevoa.com
karwantv.com
lavoixdelamerique.com
myvoa.com
myvoa.net
myvoa.us
myvoanews.com
nbtna.com
nouvelvoa.com
pashtovoa.com
radioaapkidunyaa.com
radiyoyacu.com
sashenhausa.com
smokinginafrica.com
somalivoa.com
specialenglish.net
specialenglish.org
specialenglish.us
studio7news.com
studiosevennews.com
tourvoa.com
urduvoa.com
usavotes2008.com
uzmobil.com
vijestiglasaamerike.com
visitvoa.com
voa.mobi
voaafrica.com
voaalbanian.com
voaamericanlife.com
voacambodia.com
voacep.com
voadeewaradio.com
voaexpress.com
voahausa.com
voahp.com
voaindonesia.com
voaindonesian.com
voakorea.com
voakurtce.com
voamobil.com
voamobile.com
voamobilni.net
voamusicmix.com
voamusicmix.net
voanews.com
voanews.info
voanews.mobi
voanews.net
voanews.org
voanews.us
voanoticias.com
voapn.net
voapnn.com
voapnn.org
voapnn.tv
voaportugues.com
voasamachar.com
voasomali.com
voaspecialenglish.com
voaspecialenglish.org
voaswahili.com
voatiengviet.com
voatour.com
voatours.com
voaurdutv.com
voavjcafe.com
xinwencn.com
zeriamerikes.com
zeriiamerikes.com

Offline AminCo

  • سرهنگ دوم
  • *
  • Posts: 3694
  • 00
  • The journey & decision has been made.
  • Respect: +2
Re: Iran's Cyber Army hacks VOA website
« Reply #21 on: February 22, 2011, 10:25:18 PM »
0
I got this from a site:
redirected VOA traffic to the hackers' own site.

Offline Catsoo

  • Global Moderator
  • سرهنگ دوم
  • *
  • Posts: 5545
  • Respect: +310
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #22 on: March 11, 2011, 04:55:28 AM »
0
Press Release–Recent attacks on Balatarin

By Atousa Bayan

March 10, 2011— Independent website, Balatarin, announced today that the recent attacks on its website servers are now under control.  A coordinated attack against several Farsi language online media outlets began on the evening of Wednesday, February 9, targeting a large variety of opposition, reformist, and independent websites such as HRANA, Saham News, Kaleme, Iran Green Voice, Advar News, and Balatarin, continued until February 15.  Some of the websites were continually attacked for three days.  However, all websites returned to normal operation shortly thereafter.  According to a February 22 VOA News report, “a group of computer hackers hijacked websites run by the Voice of America this week, sending its online traffic to an Internet website claimed to be run by the Iranian Cyber Army.”  Attacks on Balatarin have recurred each time a public protest has taken place over the past month.  Balatarin has successfully managed the latest attacks of March 8, 2011.

Iranian opposition leaders Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi’s call to public demonstrations in support of the Egyptian and Tunisian people’s democracy movements, brought tens of thousands of demonstrators in fresh protests to streets of Tehran and other major cities on February 14.  Several days before the scheduled demonstrations, the attacks on the popular Iranian websites, including Balatarin, started.  According to Rooz Online, just as pro-Green Movement protests began, the sporadic attacks on several websites caused service disruption and, in some cases, complete shut-down of service for some time.  “Many websites had problems delivering their content, especially during the days before and after February 14,” said Steven Wan, Balatarin’s cyber security consultant.  “Between February 9 and February 15, three types of attacks were made on Balatarin; SYN flooding, aimed to open tens of thousands of connections per second, but not to retrieve any content; HTTP flooding, aimed to retrieve web pages thousands of times per second; and intrusion attacks, using tools scanning vulnerabilities in the website,” said Wan.

The Iranian government continues its animosity with Balatarin for its role in the organization of protests, beginning after the disputed 2009 presidential election; however, Balatarin is an independent medium, dedicated to free exchange of thoughts, ideas, and information among Iranians, without any political affiliation.  With or without access to Balatarin, people took to the streets on February 14, February 20, March 1, and March 8, protesting the Iranian government’s almost two-year-long crackdown on Iranian activists, journalists, students, artists, and ordinary dissidents.  The attack on street protesters on February 14 left two young protesters dead, but people took to the streets one more time on Februay 20 to commemorate the slain protesters.  Attempts at disrupting service to Balatarin on February 20 and March 1 were unsuccessful, and the website became temporarily inaccessible during the March 8 attacks.

Many of the sites affected by the cyber attack campaign had problems delivering their content, especially during the days before and after the scheduled street protests of February 14.  “We studied the attacks very carefully, and found their potential sources.  We added more servers and infrastructure to our network to remedy the situation,” said Wan about how the problem was addressed.

“State-sponsored hackers not only aim to silence their opposition, they are cowards in that they use methods which count on their impunity, evading consequences of their actions.  Furthermore, they abuse public infrastructures such as the internet for carrying out the attacks, without even paying for the fake traffic they generate,” said Wan.

“It becomes so expensive for a site to be attacked like this.  Balatarin has to pay for the attacks it sustains, not only in terms of time spent, but also the bogus traffic.  It could be devastating to most websites to remedy the situation,” added the cyber security professional.

“Attacks are difficult to stop, because they require very large investments in dedicated hardware and expertise to stop them.  We are making sure we have what it takes to prevent future attacks,” concluded Steven Wan.

http://en.balatarin.com/2011/03/10/press-release-recent-attacks-on-balatarin/

Offline Catsoo

  • Global Moderator
  • سرهنگ دوم
  • *
  • Posts: 5545
  • Respect: +310
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #23 on: March 15, 2011, 03:39:43 AM »
0
Report: Iran's paramilitary launches cyber attack

(AP) – 19 hours ago

TEHRAN, Iran (AP) — Iranian hackers working for the powerful Revolutionary Guard's paramilitary Basij group have launched attacks on websites of the "enemies," a state-owned newspaper reported Monday in a rare acknowledgment from Iran that it's involved in cyber warfare.

The report followed an announcement in January that Iran had formed its first cyber police unit in an attempt by authorities to gain an edge in the digital world.

The Internet has also been a key outlet for Iran's opposition since the 2009 disputed presidential election. In addition, Iran has been trying to boost its web defenses after the Stuxnet computer worm made its way into computers involved with the country's controversial nuclear program.

Gen. Ali Fazli, acting commander of the Basij, was quoted by state-owned IRAN paper as saying Iran's cyber army is made up of university teachers, students and clerics. He said its attacks were a retaliation for similar attacks on Iran, according to the semi-official Mehr news agency. There were no further details about the possible targets or the time of the attacks.

"As there are cyber attacks on us, so is our cyber army of the Basij, which includes university instructors and students, as well as clerics, attacking websites of the enemy," Fazli said. "Without resorting to the power of the Basij, we would not have been able to monitor and confront our enemies."

So far, the Revolutionary Guard — Iran's military-industrial powerhouse — was believed linked to the secretive "Cyber Army" that emerged to fight opposition websites and blogs after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's disputed re-election in 2009.

In February, Guard chief, Gen. Mohammad Ali Jafari, signaled that the force supports the cyber army, describing it as a "defensive, security, political and cultural need for all countries." Jafari claimed at the time that the Guard have been successful in cyber warfare.

Iran has been seeking to master the digital world as a crucial step to prepare for what it calls "soft war," which includes fighting against cyber attacks such as the Stuxnet computer worm that Iran said was aimed at sabotaging its uranium enrichment program.

Iranian officials claimed there were no setbacks in nuclear operations from Stuxnet but a November report by the U.N. nuclear agency said Iran's enrichment program was temporarily shut down in a possible link to the worm's infiltration at the Natanz nuclear facility.

The origins of Stuxnet are unclear. But it's considered a highly sophisticated malware designed to attack industrial systems and could have been aimed at the centrifuges used in uranium enrichment. Washington and others worry that Iran could eventually produce nuclear material for warheads, but Iran insists it only seeks to enrich uranium for energy and research.

The country has also been wary about Western cultural influences while trying to gain the upper hand in cyberspace against web-savvy opposition groups. Opposition groups use proxy servers and other tactics to stay ahead of authorities.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jlwiVKEhlj8CjRz6dzR-McTlnRHw?docId=e0a156d6372249c2b2a955211602d3cd

Offline DarkOmen

  • گروهبان دوم
  • *
  • Posts: 1145
  • ca
  • Respect: +12
Re: Iranian cyber attacks
« Reply #24 on: March 15, 2011, 12:24:21 PM »
0
so what did they attack?? and is it smart to say that they were responsible for any attack that took place? i mean this sort of thing can be used against the IRI. i personally think they should do what they must but deny any involvement.
Si vis pacem, para bellum  "If you wish for peace, prepare for war" peace through strength

 

SMF 2.0.2 | SMF © 2011, Simple Machines
Page created in 1.612 seconds with 23 queries.