Photo 12 Feb 19 notes Iranian Cyber Army hacked  Jaras Website.
 
 
 

Iranian Cyber Army hacked JARAS and list above. The message on the hacked site says in Persian: “To respect the referendum was held in Persian date 22 Bahman Vmrdmy voted to respect the great nation of Iran to homespun “.” Iranian Cyber army recentlyhacked Twitter and Chinese Baidu but does not claim any direct link with Iranian government
LIST OF CLOSED WEBSITES:
websites: kaleme.com rahesabz.net kaleme.org tahavolesabz.com

Iranian Cyber Army hacked  Jaras Website.

Iranian Cyber Army hacked JARAS and list above. The message on the hacked site says in Persian: “To respect the referendum was held in Persian date 22 Bahman Vmrdmy voted to respect the great nation of Iran to homespun “.” Iranian Cyber army recentlyhacked Twitter and Chinese Baidu but does not claim any direct link with Iranian government

LIST OF CLOSED WEBSITES:

websites: kaleme.com rahesabz.net kaleme.org tahavolesabz.com

Photo 12 Feb 18 notes iraniancyberarmy:


Iranian Cyber Army hacked  Jaras Website.
 
 

Iranian Cyber Army hacked JARAS and list above. The message on the hacked site says in Persian: “To respect the referendum was held in Persian date 22 Bahman Vmrdmy voted to respect the great nation of Iran to homespun “.” Iranian Cyber army recentlyhacked Twitter and Chinese Baidu but does not claim any direct link with Iranian government
LIST OF CLOSED WEBSITES:
websites: kaleme.com rahesabz.net kaleme.org tahavolesabz.com

iraniancyberarmy:


Iranian Cyber Army hacked  Jaras Website.

Iranian Cyber Army hacked JARAS and list above. The message on the hacked site says in Persian: “To respect the referendum was held in Persian date 22 Bahman Vmrdmy voted to respect the great nation of Iran to homespun “.” Iranian Cyber army recentlyhacked Twitter and Chinese Baidu but does not claim any direct link with Iranian government

LIST OF CLOSED WEBSITES:

websites: kaleme.com rahesabz.net kaleme.org tahavolesabz.com

Photo 30 Jan 18 notes 
Iranian Cyber Army hacked  Jaras Website.
 

Iranian Cyber Army hacked JARAS and list above. The message on the hacked site says in Persian: “To respect the referendum was held in Persian date 22 Bahman Vmrdmy voted to respect the great nation of Iran to homespun “.” Iranian Cyber army recentlyhacked Twitter and Chinese Baidu but does not claim any direct link with Iranian government
LIST OF CLOSED WEBSITES:
websites: kaleme.com rahesabz.net kaleme.org tahavolesabz.com


Iranian Cyber Army hacked  Jaras Website.

Iranian Cyber Army hacked JARAS and list above. The message on the hacked site says in Persian: “To respect the referendum was held in Persian date 22 Bahman Vmrdmy voted to respect the great nation of Iran to homespun “.” Iranian Cyber army recentlyhacked Twitter and Chinese Baidu but does not claim any direct link with Iranian government

LIST OF CLOSED WEBSITES:

websites: kaleme.com rahesabz.net kaleme.org tahavolesabz.com

Text 30 Jan 3 notes Iranian Cyber Army hacked Radio Zamaneh

Iranian Cyber Army hacked Netherlands based Radio Zamaneh. The message on the hacked site says in Persian: “you who betray your country are not safe even when you are with your masters.” Iranian Cyber army recentlyhacked Twitter and Chinese Baidu but does not claim any direct link with Iranian government.

Photo 14 Jan 3 notes Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s Website Hacked By Iranian Cyber Army
 
 
 

(THAINDIAN NEWS) The increasing rate of cyber crime and website hacking is becoming a serious issue of these days. Last month, a band of hackers who called themselves as “Iranian Cyber Army” had hacked a popular social networking site and claimed their dominance in the cyber world. It appears that after the social networking sites, the hackers have aimed the websites of politicians. In a recent report, it has been stated the cyber criminals have targeted the website of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the sixth President of the Islamic Republic of Iran.
As per the reports, the criminals who had hacked the website of the president had prayed for his death in the year 2010. It has been reported that the hacker had mentioned the list of celebrities, who had died in the year 2009 and wanted god to take the life of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in the present year. Reports indicate that the hackers had not only prayed for the death of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad but also hoped the same for Ayatollah Sayyid Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran. Hacking of the website and praying for his death on his own site has raised the eyebrows of people. Many people had tried to visit his website after the report of hacking surfaced. However, most of them could not as the site faced some outage problems.
The reports of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s website hacking has created a huge controversy but none of the cyber crime group has claimed this act. Media representative tried to contact the Iranian officials to know about the investigation report of this act. However, none of the officials have made any comment yet.

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s Website Hacked By Iranian Cyber Army

(THAINDIAN NEWS) The increasing rate of cyber crime and website hacking is becoming a serious issue of these days. Last month, a band of hackers who called themselves as “Iranian Cyber Army” had hacked a popular social networking site and claimed their dominance in the cyber world. It appears that after the social networking sites, the hackers have aimed the websites of politicians. In a recent report, it has been stated the cyber criminals have targeted the website of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the sixth President of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

As per the reports, the criminals who had hacked the website of the president had prayed for his death in the year 2010. It has been reported that the hacker had mentioned the list of celebrities, who had died in the year 2009 and wanted god to take the life of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in the present year. Reports indicate that the hackers had not only prayed for the death of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad but also hoped the same for Ayatollah Sayyid Ali Khamenei, the Supreme Leader of Iran. Hacking of the website and praying for his death on his own site has raised the eyebrows of people. Many people had tried to visit his website after the report of hacking surfaced. However, most of them could not as the site faced some outage problems.

The reports of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s website hacking has created a huge controversy but none of the cyber crime group has claimed this act. Media representative tried to contact the Iranian officials to know about the investigation report of this act. However, none of the officials have made any comment yet.



Photo 11 Jan 1 note Control And Manage Internet By Our Power.
Baidu is suddenly unavailable, with sources all over China confirming this.
It seems that China’s most popular search engine, with a market share of over 77%has been hacked by Iranian hackers.
At present, the website is unavailable, but we have the a screenshot for you.
It seems that the website has had its DNS hacked by the “Iranian cyber Army”, the same guys that hacked Twitter a few weeks ago. The process, called DNS cache poisoning, is the corruption of an Internet server’s domain name system (DNS) table by replacing an Internet address with that of another, rogue address, in this case what the Iranian Cyber Army want you to see.
Exactly why The Iranian Cyber Army has decided to target Baidu.com is unknown but sources say it might be in relation to Iran’s nuclear ambitions, although no one is certain.
Group behind Twitter hack takes down Baidu.com
The group that took down Twitter.com last month has apparently claimed another victim: China’s largest search engine Baidu.com.
Baidu.com was offline late Monday, but at one point it displayed an image saying “This site has been hacked by Iranian Cyber Army,” according to a report in the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party and other Web sites.
With more than half of China’s Internet search market, Baidu is by far China’s most-used search engine. The company could not immediately be reached for comment.  Not much is known about the Iranian Cyber Army, which first gained notoriety with its December 18 Twitter attack. Hacking groups such as this are constantly defacing Web sites, but it is extremely rare for them to take down a site as widely used as Twitter or Baidu.com.
According to security experts, Baidu’s domain name records appear to have been tampered with. On Monday, the company was using domain name servers belonging to HostGator, a Florida ISP, instead of the Baidu.com nameservers the company normally uses. “It looks like their domain account credentials may have been snagged,” said Paul Ferguson, a researcher with the antivirus vendor Trend Micro.  That’s the same technique that was used to hijack Twitter, when Iranian Cyber Army hackers were apparently able to log in to the account used to manage Twitter’s DNS records and redirect visitors to another Web server that posted a message similar to the one spotted on Baidu.com. That attack knocked Twitter offline for more than an hour.

Control And Manage Internet By Our Power.

Baidu is suddenly unavailable, with sources all over China confirming this.

It seems that China’s most popular search engine, with a market share of over 77%has been hacked by Iranian hackers.

At present, the website is unavailable, but we have the a screenshot for you.

It seems that the website has had its DNS hacked by the “Iranian cyber Army”, the same guys that hacked Twitter a few weeks ago. The process, called DNS cache poisoning, is the corruption of an Internet server’s domain name system (DNS) table by replacing an Internet address with that of another, rogue address, in this case what the Iranian Cyber Army want you to see.

Exactly why The Iranian Cyber Army has decided to target Baidu.com is unknown but sources say it might be in relation to Iran’s nuclear ambitions, although no one is certain.

Group behind Twitter hack takes down Baidu.com

The group that took down Twitter.com last month has apparently claimed another victim: China’s largest search engine Baidu.com.

Baidu.com was offline late Monday, but at one point it displayed an image saying “This site has been hacked by Iranian Cyber Army,” according to a report in the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party and other Web sites.

With more than half of China’s Internet search market, Baidu is by far China’s most-used search engine. The company could not immediately be reached for comment. Not much is known about the Iranian Cyber Army, which first gained notoriety with its December 18 Twitter attack. Hacking groups such as this are constantly defacing Web sites, but it is extremely rare for them to take down a site as widely used as Twitter or Baidu.com.

According to security experts, Baidu’s domain name records appear to have been tampered with. On Monday, the company was using domain name servers belonging to HostGator, a Florida ISP, instead of the Baidu.com nameservers the company normally uses. “It looks like their domain account credentials may have been snagged,” said Paul Ferguson, a researcher with the antivirus vendor Trend Micro. That’s the same technique that was used to hijack Twitter, when Iranian Cyber Army hackers were apparently able to log in to the account used to manage Twitter’s DNS records and redirect visitors to another Web server that posted a message similar to the one spotted on Baidu.com. That attack knocked Twitter offline for more than an hour.


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