Holmes
FULL MEMBER
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2011
- Messages
- 1,015
- Reaction score
- -2
- Country
- Location
Anonymous' hackers mistake Kasumigaura for Kasumigaseki
The international hackers group Anonymous hacked the website of the Kasumigaura River Office in Ibaraki Prefecture, apparently mistaking "Kasumigaura" for "Kasumigaseki," the location of many central government offices.
In a protest against the enactment of the revised Copyright Law, the group named the Supreme Court, the Democratic Party of Japan and central government offices as targets for cyber-attacks.
After its declaration was posted online, several government websites were attacked and some content was rewritten by the hackers.
The Kasumigaura River Office, which is run by the Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism Ministry's Kanto Regional Development Bureau, has no connection with copyright work. However, English messages appeared on its website, reading: "We are Anonymous" and "We do not forgive."
On Tuesday evening, a user on Anonymous' social networking site pointed it out, and asked whether it was a mistake.
In response, a person believed to be one of the main members of the group said they did not know what kind of website it was.
Anonymous also tweeted in Japanese: "We made a mistake. We're sorry. Japanese is difficult."
Meanwhile, the website of the Japanese Society for Rights of Authors, Composers and Publishers (JASRAC) could not be accessed Thursday morning.
Anonymous also tweeted about this, implying it may attack JASRAC's website.
'Anonymous' hackers mistake Kasumigaura for Kasumigaseki | The Jakarta Post
The international hackers group Anonymous hacked the website of the Kasumigaura River Office in Ibaraki Prefecture, apparently mistaking "Kasumigaura" for "Kasumigaseki," the location of many central government offices.
In a protest against the enactment of the revised Copyright Law, the group named the Supreme Court, the Democratic Party of Japan and central government offices as targets for cyber-attacks.
After its declaration was posted online, several government websites were attacked and some content was rewritten by the hackers.
The Kasumigaura River Office, which is run by the Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism Ministry's Kanto Regional Development Bureau, has no connection with copyright work. However, English messages appeared on its website, reading: "We are Anonymous" and "We do not forgive."
On Tuesday evening, a user on Anonymous' social networking site pointed it out, and asked whether it was a mistake.
In response, a person believed to be one of the main members of the group said they did not know what kind of website it was.
Anonymous also tweeted in Japanese: "We made a mistake. We're sorry. Japanese is difficult."
Meanwhile, the website of the Japanese Society for Rights of Authors, Composers and Publishers (JASRAC) could not be accessed Thursday morning.
Anonymous also tweeted about this, implying it may attack JASRAC's website.
'Anonymous' hackers mistake Kasumigaura for Kasumigaseki | The Jakarta Post