[ISN] Parts of the New York Times site still down after HFG attack

From: mea culpa <jericho_at_dimensional.com>
Date: Sat 19 Sep 1998 - 14:12:35 CDT
[Moderator: _Markoff said Friday. "I know very little about who this group
 is and whether they're more than one guy down in the basement."_
 This thoroughly pisses me off. Markoff mailed me on 
 Mon, 14 Sep 1998 08:24:20 +0100, and said "actually Jericho, the logs are
 very interesting. it's obvious you knew about the attacks while they were
 taking place. The Times can see that from messages you were posting. What
 else did you know?". Why did he say such a stupid and libelous thing?
 Simply because I forwarded the message sent to the ISN list by the
 attackers to ISN after it happened. For not knowing much about who this
 group is, it sure is funny to see him jump to conclusions and say with
 such certainty that I was involved.]

Forwarded From: William Knowles <erehwon@kizmiaz.dis.org>

NEW YORK (September 18, 1998 11:31 p.m. EDT http://www.nandotimes.com)  -
Areas of the New York Times Web site were still out of action Friday, five
days after the newspaper battled hackers attacking the site and then
pulled it offline for much of Sunday. 
 
Online readers on Friday found they could still not gain access to New
York Times Web page classifieds, archive, forums and search areas.  A
company spokeswoman said around 95 percent of the site was back up after
Sunday's nine-hour shutdown. 
 
"We're doing the best that we can to get it back up," New York Times
spokeswoman Nancy Nielsen said in an interview. "There's no point in
getting it back up unless we're sure we're secure." 
 
Nielsen said the Federal Bureau of Investigation is looking into Sunday's
attack by a group calling itself "Hacking for Girlies." 

The newspaper fought a two-hour struggle Sunday morning for control of the
site before closing it down. 

The hacker group, supporting a computer hacker imprisoned in Los Angeles
since 1995, repeatedly inserted lewd pictures and text ridiculing two New
York Times reporters, John Markoff and Matt Richtel. 
 
Markoff wrote "TakeDown," a book detailing the search for Kevin Mitnick, a
hacker who was convicted of computer-related fraud charges and whose
imprisonment has become a cause in the hacker community. 

"People haven't said such nasty things about me since the sixth grade,"
Markoff said Friday. "I know very little about who this group is and
whether they're more than one guy down in the basement." 


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Received on Sun Sep 20 10:45:25 1998
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