Singapore pm website hacked




















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Read full article. Activist hacker group Anonymous attacked the government website of the Singapore Prime Minister Office on November 7, Next to it was another image saying: "PM Lee warns hackers: We will track you down - even if you think you're 'anonymous'".

The defaced section was quickly taken offline after the hacking incident surfaced in a posting on Facebook. The rest of the site was working normally. In a statement issued early Friday, the government's Infocomm Development Authority said it was investigating the incident. Social media and independent websites have become the main arenas of political debate in Singapore, whose mainstream newspapers and broadcasters are widely perceived to be pro-government.

While this is in progress, visitors to government websites may experience intermittent problems with access. This will be completed as soon as possible. The regulator said this indicated distributed denial of service attacks were launched against the sites, and blamed a vulnerability in the Google search bar within the two breached sites that allowed hackers to compromise the websites. ZDNet is awaiting Google's response on this. The affected page of the PMO website was defaced with a headline that read "It's great to be Singaporean today", alongside an image of the now-infamous Guy Fawkes mask commonly associated with Anonymous.

The page also contained this statement text: "PM Lee warns hackers: We will track you down--even if you think you're 'anonymous'. The breach comes after Lee had pledged to "spare no effort" to "track down" hackers who target Singapore's IT infrastructure. This was the first time he had responded to earlier threats by a hacker called "The Messiah" and part of the Anonymous group, who posted a YouTube video in protest of the Singapore government's online media licensing rule.

Lee said online anonymity did not mean those responsible for cyberattacks should not be held accountable. Developers are in short supply. Here are the skills and programming languages employers need. Time for a Linux smartphone? The painful shame of owning an Android phone.



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