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Friday, June 17, 2011

List of Malaysian Government Website Hacked for Blocking File Sharing Pages


On 30 May 2011, due to law and piracy, Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC) gave an order to lock 10 filesharing websites in Malaysia..

The letter, which was leaked online, also stated that the websites were being blocked for breaching Section 41 of the Copyright Act 1987, which deals with pirated content. To read more visit: The Star

1. www.warez-bb.org
2. thepiratebay.org
3. www.megaupload.com
4. www.fileserve.com
5. www.depositfiles.com
6. www.filestube.com
7. www.duckload.com
8. www.putlocker.com
9. www.megavideo.com
10. www.movie2k.to



Anonymous - Operation Malaysia
Greetings, Malaysia, We have seen the censorship taken by the Malaysian government, blocking sites like The Pirate Bay, and WikiLeaks. Malaysia is one of the world's strictest governments, even blocking out movies, and television shows. These acts of censorship are inexcusable. You are taking away a basic human right. The internet is here for freedom, without fear of government interference. Do not think that no one else notices. Your structured government has done the talking, and we hear loud and clear. Let this be an announcement to all your people. This is a sign, a warning, and an opportunity to listen to ideas above your own. In a way you are being stubborn. But how will this help anyone or your country. We fear that if you make further decisions to take away human freedom. We are obligated to act fast and have no mercy. For rules were meant to be broken. And corruption was meant to be washed away and forgiven. Now we will wash your corruption away so be prepared. Take this as a favour.



Malaysia's Communications and Multimedia Commission said that 51 websites in the .gov.my domain were attacked beginning late Wednesday, and that 41 of the sites suffered various levels of disruption.

The MCMC, the country's Internet and telecommunications regulator, did not however provide information on the nature of the attacks, or the people behind it, describing them only as "unknown hackers".

However, it made references to some of the websites recovering quickly, suggesting that these sites faced a DDoS or distributed denial-of-service attack rather than a hack.
DDoS attacks can make a website inaccessible to users by swamping the website with traffic from hundreds or thousands of computers.

Such attacks are a known tactic of Anonymous, a hacker group that had threatened to attack Malaysia.

The MCMC had noticed a reduction in the levels of attack by 4 a.m. local time Thursday, it said. The attacks had little effect on Malaysian users, and most of the websites have already recovered, it said.

"We do not expect the overall recovery to these websites to take long," it said. "The public is advised to report any information they may have regarding the identity of these hackers as the act to disrupt network services is a serious offence," it said.

Anonymous has used various online forums to threaten Malaysia with an attack in protest against the government's decision to block 10 websites that reportedly allowed the download of pirated content. Earlier this week, Anonymous invited people to join Operation Malaysia, targeting a government website from 7.30 p.m. GMT on Wednesday (3.30 a.m. Thursday, local time).


List of hacked Malaysia government website:
To view the complete list visit: JOSHUAONGYS
http://www.malaysia.gov.my
http://moha.gov.my/
http://www.kpdnkk.gov.my/
http://www.sabahtourism.com/
http://www.eghrmis.gov.my/
http://penang.uitm.edu.my/
http://www.tourism.gov.my/
http://www.spr.gov.my/
http://www.bomba.gov.my/
http://www.jbiotech.gov.my/
https://ezi2care.jkm.gov.my/
http://www.moe.gov.my/
http://www.cidb.gov.my/
http://www.treasury.gov.my/
http://www.kkr.gov.my/
http://www.penerangan.gov.my/
http://www.1malaysia.com.my/
http://www.parlimen.gov.my/
http://www.rmp.gov.my/
http://jpm.gov.my/
http://www.mocat.gov.my/
http://www.nsc.gov.my/
http://www.mohr.gov.my/
http://www.kjc.gov.my/

In Germany they came first for the Communists,
and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Communist.
Then they came for the Jews,
and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a Jew.
Then they came for the trade unionists,
and I didn't speak up because I wasn't a trade unionist.
Then they came for the Catholics,
and I didn't speak up because I was a Protestant.
Then they came for me,
and by that time no one was left to speak up.

Martin Niemoeller (1892-1984)
German Protestant Clergyman

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