Patriotic hacking

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Patriotic hacking is a term for computer hacking or system cracking in which citizens or supporters of a country, traditionally industrialized Western countries but increasingly developing countries, attempt to perpetrate attacks on, or block attacks by, perceived enemies of the state. Recent media attention has focused on efforts related to terrorists and their own attempts to conduct an online or electronic intifada - cyberterrorism. Patriot hacking is illegal in countries such as the United States yet is on the rise elsewhere. "The FBI said that recent experience showed that an increase in international tension was mirrored in the online world with a rise in cyber activity such as web defacements and denial of service attacks," according to the BBC.[1]

Examples

War in Iraq - 2003

At the onset of the War in Iraq in 2003, the FBI was concerned about the increase in hack attacks as the intensity of the conflict grew.[2] Since then, it has been becoming increasingly popular in the North America, Western Europe and Israel.[citation needed] These are the countries which have the greatest threat to Islamic terrorism and its aforementioned digital version.[citation needed]

Summer Olympics - 2008

Around the time of the 2008 Summer Olympics torch relay, which was marred by unrest in Tibet, Chinese hackers claim to have hacked the websites of CNN (accused of selective reporting on the 2008 Lhasa riots[3]) and Carrefour (a French shopping chain, allegedly supporting Tibetan independence),[4] while websites and forums gave tutorials on how to launch a DDoS attack specifically on the CNN website.[citation needed]

Op Vijaya by Indian hackers – 2015

Indian hackers in 2015 took down thousands of Pakistani websites including pakistan.gov.pk and Right To Information Pakistan under the attack named as #OPvijaya under the leadership of In73ct0r d3vil. This attack is considered to be a patriotic move by Indian hackers. Government of India and India's NSA Ajit Dhoval showed support to the attack on his twitter id.[5][6]

See also

References