The Israeli government on
Sunday said it has been hit with more than 44 million cyberattacks
since it began aerial strikes on Gaza last week. Anonymous, the hacker
collective, claimed responsibility for taking down some sites and
leaking passwords because of what it calls Israel's "barbaric, brutal and despicable treatment" of Palestinians.
"The war is being fought on three fronts," Carmela Avner,
Israel's chief information officer, said on Sunday in a press release.
"The first is physical, the second is the world of social networks and
the third is cyberattacks.
"The attackers are
attempting to harm the accessibility of Israel's government websites on
an ongoing basis. When events like the current operation occur, this
sector heats up and we see increased activity. Therefore, at this time,
defending the governmental computer systems is of invaluable
importance."
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Israel and the military wing of Hamas have been criticized for using ready-to-share images on social media to spread spin about the conflict, which has claimed the lives of about 100 Palestinians and three Israelis since the back-and-forth violence began again Wednesday.
There is some dispute about the effectiveness of the cyberattacks.
Israel says the attacks have largely been unsuccessful.
"We are reaping the
fruits on the investment in recent years in the development of
computerized defense systems, but we have a lot of work in store for
us," Israel's finance minister, Yuval Steinitz, said in a written
statement.
Reuters quotes him as saying only one website was down for 10 minutes.
Anonymous, meanwhile, posted a list of more than 650 Israel-based websites it says it has taken down or defaced since last week.
"They've knocked down websites, deleted databases and have leaked e-mail addresses and passwords," Casey Chan wrote Friday for the tech site Gizmodo. "It's a whopping takedown."
A post on an Anonymous Twitter feed Monday morning
said another set of hackers had defaced the Israeli versions of several
Microsoft websites, including Bing, MSN and Skype. Visitors to Bing's
Israeli site on Monday morning saw an anti-Israel rant instead of a
search-engine homepage.
"Microsoft is aware of
the site defacements and working to get all sites fully functional," a
company spokeswoman wrote in an e-mail to CNN. "At present, we have seen
no evidence to suggest the compromise of customer information but will
take action to help protect customers as necessary."
A page associated with
Anonymous also posted a new threat: "November 2012 will be a month to
remember for the (Israel Defense Forces) and Internet security forces.
Israeli Gov. this is/will turn into a cyberwar."
Some observers took this as a sign of an escalating digital battle.
"Beyond mere 'denial of
service' tactics that blocked sites with floods of junk data, the
hackers also ramped up their attacks to penetrations of any vulnerable
target available to them, resulting in tens of thousands of Israeli
citizens' and supporters' private data dumped onto the Web," wrote Andy Greenberg from Forbes.
Others said most of Anonymous' threats have been "hollow" so far.
"Today, Anon lacks the
talent and semi-cohesion it once boasted across the net, and its most
recent online crusade is an embarrassing reminder," Sam Biddle wrote for Gizmodo on Monday. "This is less a war than the hacker equivalent of egging someone's house and then smoking weed behind a Denny's."
The group is calling its campaign #OpIsrael.
"While the Israeli
government almost certainly has backups of the aformentioned databases,
these attacks as well as the defacements show Anonymous isn't just doing
its usual spree of overloading target sites," writes another tech blog, TheNextWeb.
"OpIsrael appears to
have gotten multiple hackers involved who are interested in doing actual
damage, or at least something that is slightly more permanent than just
a 404," which is the code that appears online when a website won't
load.
Greenberg, from Forbes,
makes the important point that none of this digital damage compares to
the loss of life on the ground in the Middle East.
"Anonymous' attacks, of
course, hardly register compared with the physical damage inflicted by
both sides in the Gaza conflict," he wrote.
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