Monday,
January 13, 2003
|
|
Feature |
|
No LoC in Indo-Pak
cyber conflict
THE
Pakistan-India conflict has entered the cyber realm as hackers across
the subcontinent have infected hundreds of thousands of computers in
more than 100 countries on the New Year’s Day and the virus is
spreading.
Last summer, when a
terrorist attack on Indian Parliament brought more than a million troops
to the border, Pakistani hackers attacked the official site of the
Indian defence ministry. They inserted messages proclaiming independence
for the Pak-occupied Kashmir. It was not the first hacking bout between
the two rivals, however, both the sides had engaged in such behaviour
previously.
The latest virus attack
had arrived with a warning for the Pakistani hackers: "Your days
are over, now it is our turn to show that ‘My India is great’ (‘Bharat
Mahan Hai,’ in Hindi)."
The message continues:
"Want peace and prosperity in India? Then (trash) corrupted
politicians." It also warns politicians: "Talent and hard work
should be respected. Self-styled (expletive) must be eliminated. No more
(expletive) monopoly."
The message included an
e-mail address - qph@hackmail.com - and a mailing address in New Delhi.
Infected computers were
automatically directed to an official Website of the Pakistan
government. Its virulent spread had enabled thousands of machines with
the code to conduct a distributed denial-of-service attack aimed at the
homepage of the Islamic Republic of Pakistan at pak.gov.pk. On Tuesday,
the virus forced one Pakistani official site, infopak.gov.pk, to suspend
service.
An earlier message also
challenged G-Force, a group of Pakistani hackers, to match the
"intelligence and expertise" of the Indian hackers. The
G-Force hackers, who reportedly operate from Lahore, had claimed
responsibility for attacking the official site of the Indian defence
ministry in the summer.
"Come and work with
us" against "the G-Force-Pak shiites", the message urged
Indian hackers.
Also, earlier this week,
e-mail management firm MessageLabs gave the new virus, dubbed W32/Yaha.M,
the No. 2 spot on the list of the most virulent computer viruses.
The first copy of the
virus was detected June 15 in an e-mail from Kuwait. Most copies were
coming from Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Kingdom.
— ANI
|