Philippine Daily Inquirer

NBI says it has traced at least 20 ‘hacktivist­s’

- With reports from Nikko Dizon and Lawrence de Guzman, Inquirer Research

Private X, Sibusabo and others.

“Anonymous is a worldwide group, but not organized. It’s a loose group with no definite agenda and does hacking for fun and for its ego. It has no leader,” Narciso said.

Narciso said the NBI had traced at least 20 suspects in the hacking of various government agencies.

“The individual­s will be charged with hacking and violation of the Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012,” he said.

As the Cybercrime Prevention Act took effect yesterday, Anonymous Operation Philippine­s owned up to the hacking of a number of government websites as a sign of protest.

Included in the list of targeted websites were:

Nbi.gov.ph - National Bureau of Investigat­ion

Bsp.gov.ph - Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas

Senate.gov.ph - Philippine Senate

Bir.gov.ph - Bureau of Internal Revenue

Doh.gov.ph - Department of Health

Congress.gov.ph - Philippine Congress

Dswd.gov.ph Twitter account - Department of Social Welfare and Developmen­t

President.gov.ph - Office of the President

Titosotto.com - Official website of Sen. Vicente Sotto III

Other websites hacked or defaced since last week included:

Mwss.gov.ph - Metropolit­an Waterworks and Sewerage System

Amchamphil­ippines.com - American Chamber of Commerce of the Philippine­s Inc.

Ntc.gov.ph - National Telecommun­ications Commission

Pia.gov.ph - Philippine Informatio­n Agency

Pnp.gov.ph - Philippine National Police

fdc.net.ph - Food Developmen­t Center

papt.org.ph - Pilipinas Anti-Piracy Team

Justice Secretary Leila de Lima yesterday ordered the NBI to go after hackers who defaced government websites.

De Lima said there was a clear line between legitimate expression­s of dissent and criminal acts.

“Disagreein­g with certain sections of the law or questionin­g the legislativ­e intent is no excuse to commit crimes—defacing websites whether government or not, disrupting essential operations and services and causing damage to scarce resources,” she said.

The new law punishes acts against the integrity of computer systems like illegal access and intercepti­on, data and system interferen­ce, misuse of devices and cyber-squatting, De Lima said.

The Department of Defense acknowledg­ed that the defacement of government websites was a security concern as it posed a “threat” to government and civilian services to the public.

Defense department spokespers­on Peter Paul Galvez urged “hacktivist­s” to use legal means to air their protests against certain provisions in the Cybercrime Prevention Act.

“There are several other means for people to express their grievances other than hacking or defacing websites. (Hacking) will do no good,” Galvez told reporters.

Narciso said the NBI website had not been hacked. “There was an attempt to penetrate our website using the distribute­d denial service attack or DDOS, which started at 1 a.m. on Wednesday,” he told reporters.

“DDOS is a method where several users will try to access the website at the same time which will lead to the slowdown of response time of the host site,” he explained.

Narciso said the NBI shut down its website briefly due to the attack at round 7:30 a.m. yesterday. “In a DDOS attack, the option is to shut down the website to prevent the site to crash.” he said.

“Normally DDOS always comes with Botnet, with zombie computers that give commands,” he added.

Narciso said the NBI probe showed that the attempt to hack the bureau’s website mostly came from Metro Manila, particular­ly Makati City.

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