The spring and summer of 2016 were spent preparing for attack. And while 
members of Task Force ARES didn't reveal everything they did to crack into 
ISIS's network, one thing they used early on was a hacking standby: a 
phishing email. ISIS members "clicked on something or they did something 
that then allowed us to gain control and then start to move," said Gen. 
Edward Cardon, the first commander of Task Force ARES.

Almost every hack starts with hacking a human, cracking a password or 
finding some low-level unpatched vulnerability in software. "The first 
thing you do when you get in there is you've got to get some persistence 
and spread out," Cardon said, adding that the ideal thing is to get an 
administrator's account. "You can operate freely inside the network because 
you look like a normal IT person." (ISIS didn't just have IT people; it had 
an entire IT department.)
New York Mysteries Collection full crack [hack]

*Download File* https://t.co/xMFzLtBH0T


The shadowy underworld of Internet hackers was rocked Tuesday by news that 
one of the world's most-wanted and most-feared computer vandals has been an 
FBI informant for months and helped authorities build a case against five 
people they say were comrades. googletag.cmd.push(function() 
googletag.display('div-gpt-ad-1449240174198-2'); ); The FBI said it 
captured the legendary hacker known as Sabu last June and he turned out to 
be Hector Xavier Monsegur, a 28-year-old self-taught, unemployed computer 
programmer with no college education, living on welfare in public housing 
in New York.His exploits made him a hero to some in cyberspace until he 
made a rookie mistake - he posted something online without cloaking his IP 
address, or computer identity - and someone tipped off the FBI.Soon after 
his arrest, he pleaded guilty and began spilling secrets, leading to 
charges Tuesday against five people in Europe and the U.S., including a 
Chicago man who boasted that he'd snared the personal data of a former U.S. 
vice president and one-time CIA director, and preventing more than 300 
attacks along the way, authorities said.Law enforcement officials said it 
marked the first time core members of the loosely organized worldwide 
hacking group Anonymous have been identified and charged in the 
U.S.Investigators said Monsegur and the other defendants were associated 
with the group and some were also part of the elite spinoff organization 
that Monsegur formed last May, Lulz Security or LulzSec. "Lulz" is Internet 
slang for "laughs" or "amusement."Monsegur and the other defendants were 
accused in court papers of hacking into corporations and government 
agencies around the world, including the U.S. Senate, filching confidential 
information, defacing websites and temporarily putting victims out of 
business. Authorities said their crimes affected more than 1 million 
people.Prosecutors said that among other things, the hackers, with Monsegur 
as their ringleader, disrupted websites belonging to Visa, MasterCard and 
PayPal in 2010 and 2011 because the companies refused to accept donations 
to Wikileaks, the organization that spilled a trove of U.S. military and 
diplomatic secrets.Also, prosecutors said, Monsegur and the others attacked 
a PBS website last May and planted a false story that slain rapper Tupac 
Shakur was alive in New Zealand. Investigators said it was retaliation for 
what the hackers perceived to be unfavorable news coverage of Wikileaks on 
the PBS program "Frontline."But it was the arrest of Monsegur that sent 
shockwaves through the Anonymous movement, in which many described him as a 
leader and one of the collective's most skilled hackers. (adsbygoogle = 
window.adsbygoogle []).push(); Some Anonymous members put on a brave 
face."Anonymous is a hydra, cut off one head and we grow two back," read 
one defiant message posted to Twitter.But the atmosphere in one of the 
group's chat rooms had an edge of panic. One Anonymous supporter discussed 
cleaning the group's hard drive. Another warned that if Sabu is 
cooperating, then "we are all going to have the FBI at are (sic) door."A 
Twitter account associated with Monsegur has some 45,000 followers and 
regularly spouts expletive-filled anti-government messages. His last tweet 
on Monday was in German and described the federal government as being run 
by "cowards." It was apparently aimed at concealing his role as an 
informant."Don't give in to these people," the message read. "Fight back. 
Stay strong."Monsegur pleaded guilty in August to charges that included 
conspiracy to commit hacking, admitting he obtained dozens of credit card 
numbers online and gave them to others or used them to pay his bills. His 
lawyer, Philip L. Weinstein, declined to comment Tuesday.His deal with 
prosecutors requires his full cooperation and testimony at any trial. In 
return, he gets leniency from a potential prison sentence of more than 120 
years. He is free on $50,000 bail.Also charged with conspiracy to commit 
computer hacking were Ryan Ackroyd, 25, of Doncaster, England; Jake Davis, 
19, of Lerwick, Scotland; Darren Martyn, 25, of Galway, Ireland; Donncha 
O'Cearrbhail, 19, of Birr, Ireland; and Jeremy Hammond, 27, of 
Chicago.Also, an unidentified 17-year-old Londoner was charged separately 
Tuesday by British police. Three of the British suspects - Ackroyd, Davis 
and the 17-year-old - were arrested last year as part of the trans-Atlantic 
investigation into LulzSec. Ackroyd was rearrested Tuesday. Davis, the 
17-year-old and a fourth British LulzSec suspect, Ryan Cleary, 20, are 
currently free on bail.Cleary's lawyer, Karen Todner, told The Associated 
Press she had no information about the indictment but said that "it 
wouldn't be surprising if one of the hackers was an FBI informant."Davis' 
lawyer, Adel Buckingham, declined to comment. Contact information for the 
other European defendants' lawyers could not immediately be located 
Tuesday.Hammond, who was arrested Monday, appeared before a federal judge 
in Chicago and was ordered transferred to New York. Hammond was charged 
with crimes related to the hacking in December of Strategic Forecasting 
Inc., a global intelligence firm in Austin, Texas, that affected up to 
860,000 victims, court papers said.The government said Hammond conspired to 
hack into computer systems used by Stratfor, a private firm that provides 
governments and others with independent geopolitical analysis.It said he 
and co-conspirators stole credit card information for approximately 60,000 
credit card users and used some of the stolen data to make more than 
$700,000 in unauthorized charges.Defense attorney Jim Fennerty described 
Hammond as compassionate, saying he had rallied against plans to hold the 
2016 Olympics in Chicago because he felt it would hurt low-income people 
and had protested against neo-Nazi groups."He's concerned about people and 
issues - that's why I like him," Fennerty said.In July, when LulzSec's 
attacks were grabbing world headlines, someone alleged that Sabu was 
Monsegur and posted personal details about him on the Internet. Sabu took 
to Twitter to deny it.Barrett Brown, a former journalist who became closely 
associated with Anonymous, said Sabu's cooperation with the FBI could do 
serious damage to Anonymous."He was an admired Anon," he said. "He's been a 
leader. People came to him with information. God knows what else he told 
them." 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may 
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
eebf2c3492

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