Archive for June 24, 2011

Inside LulzSec: Chatroom logs shine a light on the secretive hackers

Very Informative article about the inner workings of hackers and their enemies.

Full Chat Room Leak here–>  LulzSec IRC leak: the full record

It was a tight-knit and enigmatic group finding its feet in the febrile world of hacker collectives, where exposing and embarrassing your targets is just as important as protecting your own identity.

But leaked logs from LulzSec‘s private chatroom – seen, and published today, by the Guardian – provide for the first time a unique, fly-on-the-wall insight into a team of audacious young hackers whose inner workings have until now remained opaque.

LulzSec is not, despite its braggadocio, a large – or even coherent – organisation. The logs reveal how one hacker known as “Sabu“, believed to be a 30-year-old security consultant, effectively controls the group of between six and eight people, keeping the others in line and warning them not to discuss what they have done with others; another, “Kayla“, provides a large botnet – networks of infected computers controlled remotely – to bring down targeted websites with distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks; while a third, “Topiary“, manages the public image, including the LulzSec Twitter feed.

They turn out to be obsessed with their coverage in the media, especially in physical newspapers, sharing pictures of coverage they have received in the Wall Street Journal and other papers. They also engineered a misinformation campaign to make people think they are a US-government sponsored team.

They also express their enmity towards a rival called The Jester – an ex-US military hacker who usually attacks jihadist sites, but has become embroiled in a dispute with Anonymous, WikiLeaks and LulzSec over the leaked diplomatic cables and, more recently, LulzSec’s attacks on US government websites, including those of the CIA and the US Senate.

In a further sign that the spotlight is beginning to engulf LulzSec, a lone-wolf hacker managed to temporarily cripple the group’s website on Friday morning. Originally thought to be the work of The Jester, an activist, known as Oneiroi, later claimed responsibility for the attack but did not provide an explanation.

The group’s ambitions went too far for some of its members: when the group hit an FBI-affiliated site on 3 June, two lost their nerve and quit, fearing reprisals from the US government. After revealing that the two, “recursion” and “devrandom” have quit, saying they were “not up for the heat”, Sabu tells the remaining members: “You realise we smacked the FBI today. This means everyone in here must remain extremely secure.”

Another member, “storm”, then asks worriedly: “Sabu, did you wipe the PBS bd [board] logs?”, referring to an attack by LulzSec on PBS on 29 May, when they planted a fake story that the dead rapper Tupac Shakur was alive. If traces remained there of the hackers’ identities, that could lead the FBI to them.

“Yes,” Sabu says. “All PBS logs are clean.” Storm replies: “Then I’m game for some more.” Sabu says: “We’re good. We got a good team here.”

Documenting a crucial five-day period in the group’s early development from 31 May to 4 June, the logs – whose authenticity has been separately confirmed through comments made online by LulzSec’s members – are believed to have been posted online by a former affiliate named “m_nerva”. They contain detailed conversations between the group, who have in recent weeks perpetrated a series of audacious attacks on a range of high-profile targets, including Sony, the CIA, the US Senate, and the UK’s Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA).

LulzSec threatened m_nerva on Tuesday in a tweet saying “Remember this tweet, m_nerva, for I know you’ll read it: your cold jail cell will be haunted with our endless laughter. Game over, child.” As an explanation, they said: “They leaked logs, we owned them [took over their computer], one of them literally started crying for mercy”. The leaked logs are the ones seen by the Guardian.

The conversations confirm that LulzSec has links with – but is distinct from – the notorious hacker group Anonymous. Sabu, a knowledgeable hacker, emerges as a commanding figure who issues orders to the small, tight-knit team with striking authority.

Despite directing the LulzSec operation, Sabu does not appear to engage in the group’s public activity, and warns others to be careful who and how they talk outside their private chatroom. “The people on [popular hacker site] 2600 are not your friends,” Sabu warns them on 2 June. “95% are there to social engineer [trick] you, to analyse how you talk. I am just reminding you. Don’t go off and befriend any of them.”

But the difficulty of keeping their exploits and identities secret proves difficult: Kayla is accused of giving some stolen Amazon voucher codes to someone outside the group, which could lead back to one of their hacks. “If he’s talking publicly, Kayla will talk to him,” Sabu comments, bluntly.

Topiary, who manages the public image of LulzSec – which centres around its popular Twitter feed, with almost 260,000 followers – also acted previously as a spokesman for Anonymous, once going head-to-head in a live video with Shirley Phelps-Roper of the controversial Westboro Baptist Church, during which he hacked into the church’s website mid-interview.

His creative use of language and sharp sense of humour earns praise from his fellow hackers in the chat logs, who tell him he should “write a fucking book”. On one occasion, after a successful DDoS attack brings down a targeted web server, Topiary responds in characteristic fashion to the hacker responsible, Storm: “You’re like our resident sniper sitting in the crow’s nest with a goddamn deck-shattering electricity blast,” he writes. “Enemy ships being riddled with holes.”

But while LulzSec has a jovial exterior, and proclaims that its purpose is to hack “for the lulz” (internet slang for laughs and giggles), Sabu is unremittingly serious. Domineering and at times almost parental, he frequently reminds the other hackers of the dangers of being tracked by the authorities, who the logs reveal are often hot on their heels.

During one exchange, a hacker named Neuron starts an IAmA (Q and A) session for LulzSec on the website Reddit for “funzies” and to engage with the public. This immediately raises the ire of Sabu, who puts an angry and abrupt halt to it.

“You guys started an IAmA on reddit?” Sabu asks in disbelief. “I will go to your homes and kill you. If you really started an IAmA bro, you really don’t understand what we are about here. I thought all this stuff was common knowledge … no more public apperances [sic] without us organizing it.”

He adds: “If you are not familiar with these hostile environments, don’t partake in it.”

The logs also reveal that the group began a campaign of disinformation around LulzSec. Their goal was to convince – and confuse – internet users into believing a conspiracy theory: that LulzSec is in fact a crack team of CIA agents working to expose the insecurities of the web, headed by Adrian Lamo, the hacker who reported the alleged WikiLeaks whistleblower Bradley Manning to the authorities.

“You guys are claiming that LulzSec is a CIA op … that Anonymous is working to uncover LulzSec … that Adrian Lamo is at the head of it all … and people actually BELIEVE this shit?” writes joepie91, another member. “You just tell some bullshit story and people fill in the rest for you.”

“I know, it’s brilliant,” replies Topiary. The attempts did pay off, with some bloggers passing comments such as: “I hypothesize that this is a government ‘red team’ or ‘red cell’ operation, aimed at building support for government intervention into internet security from both the public and private sectors.”

The group monitors news reports closely, and appears to enjoy – even thrive – on the publicity its actions bring. But the logs show that the members are frustrated by the efforts of a self-professed “patriot-hacker” known as the Jester (or th3j35t3r), whose name is pejoratively referenced throughout.

The Jester is purportedly an ex-US military hacker, and was responsible for high-profile attacks on WikiLeaks prior to the release of US diplomatic cables in November. In recent weeks he has made LulzSec his principal target, describing them as “common bullies”. Topiary in turn dismisses The Jester as a “pompous elitism-fuelling blogger” – but the group is always worried that The Jester or his associates are trying to track them down.

The Jester claims LulzSec are motivated by money and points toallegations that the group tried to extort money from Unveillance, a data security company. Similar accusations against LulzSec by two other groups, “Web Ninjas” and “TeaMp0isoN_”. Web Ninjas say they want to see LulzSec “behind bars” for committing “insane acts … in the name of publicity or financial gain or anti-govt agenda”.

The logs do not reveal any discussion of extortion between the LulzSec inner circle; nor do they indicate any underlying political motivations for the attacks. But amid the often tense atmosphere depicted in the logs the hackers do occasionally find time to talk politics.

“One of these days we will have tanks on our homes,” writes trollpoll, shortly after it emerged the US government was reclassifying hacking as a possible act of war. “Yea, no shit,” responds Storm.

“Corporations should realize the internet isn’t theirs,” adds joepie91. “And I don’t mean the physical tubes, but the actual internet … the community, idea, concept.”

“Yes, the utopia is to create a new internet,” says trollpoll. “Corporation free.”

On Monday 20 June, Sabu’s worst fears may have been confirmed when a 19-year-old named Ryan Cleary was arrested in Wickford, Essex and later charged with a cyber attack in connection with a joint Scotland Yard and FBI probe in to a hacking group believed to be LulzSec.

Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson described the arrest as “very significant”, though LulzSec itself was quick to claim Cleary was not a member of the group and had only allowed it to host “legitimate chatrooms” on his server.

“Clearly the UK police are so desperate to catch us that they’ve gone and arrested someone who is, at best, mildly associated with us,” the group tweeted.

An individual named “Ryan” is occasionally referenced by the hackers in the logs, though he himself does not feature and appears to have only a loose association with the group.

Scotland Yard confirmed on Thursday that it was continuing to work with “a range of agencies” as part of an “ongoing investigation into network intrusions and distributed denial of service attacks against a number of international business and intelligence agencies by what is believed to be the same hacking group”.

In response to the leaked logs, LulzSec posted a statement on the website pastebin, claiming users named joepie91, Neuron, Storm and trollpoll were “not involved with LulzSec” and rather “just hang out with us”.

They added: “Those logs are primarily from a channel called #pure-elite, which is /not/ the LulzSec core chatting channel. #pure-elite is where we gather potential backup/subcrew research and development battle fleet members – ie, we were using that channel only to recruit talent for side-operations.”

The group has vowed to continue its actions undeterred. But they now face a determined pincer movement from the FBI, UK police, and other hackers – including The Jester, who has been relentless in his pursuit of them for more than a fortnight. If its members’ real identities are revealed, LulzSec may vanish as quickly as it rose to prominence.

Today I lost all trust in the Christian Science Monitor, after the published the article Debt defaults as moral fault. This was the biggest load of pro bank propaganda i have ever seen in my entire life, and Yahoo correctly put it in the opinion section of their new site because it is completely bogus and non-factual.

Points from their article and my arguments below:

Point 1 - Back in the day of Charles Dickens, anyone not paying a debt could be arrested as a moral menace to society. While debtors’ prisons aren’t coming back, it is worth recalling such Victorian virtue in light of three debt crises:

Argument 1 – Also back in this day corporations or at least their owners were held to the same moral standard as the public. The debt that America is in can rest solely on the shoulders of the big banks and our corrupt  government.  If anyone should be going to jail is should be Ben Bernanke and the CEO’s of Citi, JP Morgan, Well Fargo, Goldmen Sac, Bank Of America, etc.

P2 - If the world isn’t careful, a certain ethical callousness may set in soon about the ease of breaking one’s word, as well as ignoring the ricochet effects on others. 

A2 – We are already way past the days of contracts meaning anything.  Major corporations have been taking advantage of the public’s trust in contracts for years through bankruptcy and courts of law.  Why should the common man sit back and get screwed because he is trying to support some dead form of ethics while major corporation bury him/her in debt.

P3 - Just look at American neighborhoods where those with “underwater” mortgages simply pack up and leave. The value of nearby houses deteriorates and banks have less money to lend. If enough people default, the housing market will worsen even more, causing more government red ink and slowing the economy.

A3 –  If the neighbors were smart they would walk away from their homes too. Don’t let the bank guilt you into not leaving your house.  They made the bad investment by loaning that much money against an asset that has not held its worth not you. You were just looking for a place to raise your family. Definitely don’t be looking out for the USA Government or your Bank they have not been looking out for you for years now, so why should you extend them the same courtesy.

P4- Breaking contracts should not be done lightly. There’s a reason certain financial instruments of debt are called bonds; they are what bind individuals to a joint enterprise. 

A4 – If there was any kind of BOND between major corporations and the public they would have told you this was a bad idea from the start.  They care only about themselves and their profits and so should you.  Don’t feel guilty about walking away from a home, if you house is upside it is most likely the best move for you and your family.  Yes this could cause the housing market to drop further, but it will also lead to a real correction in the market and hopefully better banking and policy practices in the future.

Maybe clean drinking water won’t be a problem in the future…

The regular sand often used to filter water is typically too coarse to catch all of the nasties passing by, and its filtering capabilities are overloaded fairly quickly. The Rice-developed sand, coated with graphite oxide, can trap more contaminants for a longer period of time. More after the jump –> [This Super Sand Makes Even Toxic Water Safe To Drink]

 

 

Volkswagen is currently testing an autopilot feature for their new line of cars possibly being released next year.  Through a combination of cameras, sensors, cruise control, GPS, and Guts… they are able to navigate the highway and stop and go traffic without the driver needed to do anything but sit back and relax.  Give this technology a few more years and you will be able to sleep in your car while it takes you to work or cross country on a road trip.

Excerpt from –> Volkswagen Autopilot Lets You Drive Hands-Free at 80 MPH

The temporary auto pilot technology uses adaptive cruise control, lane assist and a variety of sensors to track your speed, your location and all the cars around you. It’s a semi-automatic system so you need to continually monitor the car. You don’t have to keep your hands on the wheel, but you really shouldn’t be napping while the car is flying down the highway at 75MPH.