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blackwiggle
11th June 2011, 05:57 AM
copied and pasted from the New York Times.

Spain Detains 3 in PlayStation Cyberattacks By DAVID JOLLY and RAPHAEL MINDER Published: June 10, 2011

The Spanish police said on Friday that they had apprehended three men suspected of computer hacking in connection with recent attacks on Sony’s PlayStation Network as well as corporate and government Web sites around the world.
The National Police identified the three as the local leadership of the shadowy international network of computer hackers known as Anonymous, which has claimed responsibility for a wide variety of attacks.
Anonymous is composed of people from various countries organized into cells that share common goals, the police said, with activists operating anonymously in a coordinated fashion.

One of the three suspects, a 31-year-old Spaniard, was detained in the southern Spanish city of Almer*a sometime after May 18, the police said. He had a computer server in his apartment in the northern Spanish port city of Gijón, where the group is believed to have attacked the Web sites of the Sony PlayStation online gaming store.

The same computer server was also believed to have been used in coordinated attacks against two Spanish banks, BBVA and Bankia; the Italian energy company Enel; and government sites in Algeria, Chile, Colombia, Egypt, Libya, Iran, Spain and New Zealand, the police said.

The two other men, both also Spaniards in their early 30s, were picked up in Barcelona and Valencia. The police statement did not make clear the timing of those detentions, but a police spokeswoman said all had occurred recently.

The spokeswoman, who did not want to be identified in accordance with department policy, said all three were subsequently released, without bail, pending formal charges.

They were expected to be charged with forming an illegal association to attack public and corporate Web sites, a charge that carries a potential sentence of up to three years in prison.

The police opened their investigation last October, after hackers overwhelmed the Spanish Ministry of Culture’s Web site to protest legislation increasing punishments for illegal downloads.

It was not immediately clear how much of a role the group may have played in the recent attacks on Sony. About a dozen Sony Web sites and services around the world have been hacked; the biggest breaches forced the company, which is based in Tokyo, to shut down its popular PlayStation Network for a month beginning in April.

The Japanese company has acknowledged that hackers compromised the personal data of tens of millions of user accounts. Earlier this month, a separate hacker collective called Lulz Security, or LulzSec, said it had breached a Sony Pictures site and released vital source code.

Sony has estimated that the hacker attacks will cost it at least 14 billion yen ($175 million), in damages, including spending on information technology, legal costs, lower sales and free offers to lure back customers.

Mami Imada, a Sony spokeswoman in Tokyo, said she had no information on the detentions and declined to comment.

The police said that they had analyzed more than two million lines of chat logs since October, as well as Web pages used by the group to identify the leadership in Spain “with the capacity to make decisions and direct attacks.” Members of Anonymous used a computer program called L.O.I.C. to crash Web sites with denial-of-service attacks, the police said.

Among recent attacks, the hackers also brought down the site of the Spanish National Electoral Commission last month before regional and municipal elections. It was that attack, on May 18, that led to the detention of the suspect in Almer*a.

The movement against the antipiracy law has been closely linked to the broader youth-led political movements that have occurred in Puerta del Sol, the central square in Madrid, and in other city squares since May 15.

These protests have called for a complete overhaul of Spain’s political system and laws aimed at stopping illegal downloading.

Hiroko Tabuchi contributed reporting.



Source:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/11/technology/11hack.html?_r=3

mdhay
11th June 2011, 10:04 AM
Winning! :g

infoxicated
11th June 2011, 10:26 AM
If they're guilty, I hope they go to jail for a very long time.

I see that Codemasters suffered data theft this week, too. The games industry is taking a beating from these bastards right now - I'd like to see the smug bastards taken down.

Mad-Ice
11th June 2011, 10:56 AM
Yeah, taken down or let them work for free to set up a better security system for Sony!

These guys that are so smart to hack big companies should be given a job! I don't know if that's the best solution or that these kind of men/women are willing to work for: "the good side". If not just take them down to prison I guess!

stin
11th June 2011, 12:56 PM
If they that good to break in, then possibly big companies probably want to hire them to show them how is it done.

But, I want them punished severely, they caused the customers alot of grief and Sony!

stevie:|

MetaKraken
11th June 2011, 02:29 PM
Serves them right for hacking PSN. :P

MegaGeeza22
11th June 2011, 02:41 PM
I believe companies used to give hackers jobs but i think today that would be very very bad!!
If Sony gave these hackers jobs every hacker on the planet will be trying to hack small and large companies... it would be absolute mayhem.
3 years? thats just wrong! $165 million!!! Sony should put there foot down and put these idiots on the streets and get there names blacklisted for life.

borell
11th June 2011, 04:02 PM
I do not now the validity of the statements in the link below, but I also now that information from the media is not always the best...

They mean IRC chanops (http://it.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2229060&cid=36403602) [slashdot.org]

Story at slashdot.org: Three Arrested For Sony/Egypt Hacks (http://it.slashdot.org/story/11/06/10/176244/Three-Arrested-For-SonyEgypt-Hacks) [slashdot.org]

BulletWraith
12th June 2011, 01:58 PM
is there any news on if the credit card info has actually been used by the hackers?

other than that I don't give a toss, it's a leisure activity *shurg*
OMG people couldn't play games online for a month??!?!

everything is dying, the environment is turning to sh!t and there are people that spent the whole month complaining that they couldn't play COD

*yawn*
zer:donutshen

infoxicated
12th June 2011, 03:38 PM
In that case, you're missing the point and should probably leave this discussion for those of us who haven't.

Medusa
12th June 2011, 08:44 PM
Even if you don't give a whit about losing the ability to play online or what this has done to Sony, you should care about the impact this has on the global economy. When consumer confidence drops, the world economy shakes. I wonder if it is the same everywhere--here I see crazy sales week after week in nearly every sector. All the stores are desperate to get people to buy anything. Recession/downturn whatever you call it, businesses are all in trouble already or very close to it, and they know it.
Sony is a huge company. What happens to it affects the stock markets which affects the banks which affects you and I since...guess what? We are all slaves to the prices generated by said stock markets and economy. Everything is interrelated these days so we can't really ignore it altogether. Sadly.

blackwiggle
13th June 2011, 12:15 AM
You just have to look at the way shopping has changed to see why things are as bad as they are for retailers, and Online sales are not the problem.

It's large multinational property developers that are to blame for a lot of this, the rise of the Super centers/Shopping Malls.
People are fed up with the Gruen Transfer designs of these places
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gruen_transfer
So a lot of these shopping malls are dying from people just avoiding them.
This is happening world wide.

Councils that have allowed these malls to be built have killed off their own high streets, the rents for shops in these malls are not only exorbitant, they demand a slice of your profits, pre-determine what type of shops will be allowed and which shops go where in these malls, even decide what you can and cannot sell.

That's just shopping malls.

Then you have the gradual lack of choice in supermarkets as one or two majors eventually get a monopoly, then price fixing between these becomes a problem, eventually to such an extent that they can control what producers get paid for their products, which in turn drives a lot of these to the wall.
There goes your local industries, hello cheap imports.
{We've just had this happen in Australia with the 2 majors, Woolworth's & Coles having a price war over Milk, selling it 60% less than beforehand]

Depressing the lot of it, we've been sold a lie and we are paying the price for it.

DJ Techno
13th June 2011, 03:27 AM
let the hackers go and let them attack microsoft.


see how people gloat about the way microsoft does their business and using the money from online gaming and purchasing to show. not even those paid off rookies can out do a combine network of Hackers...

come on its. saying exactly like the movie years ago said to beat a system.

Medusa
14th June 2011, 03:38 AM
I guess I should have clarified: I'm not saying that the hack/PSN outage has direct effect, but rather is contributing to the tarnishing of Sony's image and definitely crushed their profit margins which in turn puts off investors. That alone contributes to the financial markets' instability in an indirect way.

Then, there are actual consumers who are put off from Sony products because of their flawed reputation.

Any type of sale that is not made, is not taxed. This means less money in the coffers of government which means less money to put in to infrastructure or, in my country, government funded jobs. Less tax means it hurts every person down the chain.

So, yeah...throw hackers in jail. Or sentence them to come work for me. Mwahaha. I'll teach you how to work for a living and you won't have any spare time or energy to go hacking businesses for the heck of it!!!

P.S. Thanks for the condensed version of Australian shopping downturn blackwiggle. In general, the same type of thing is happening here. BUT, there are very few malls in my province that could even claim to come close to the Gruen transfer design. Well, TBH, there's so few malls in Manitoba that every resident has them memorized. All the females anyway :D