日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

Society

Hackers attack Baidu; Iran govt denies connection

By Yan Jie and Chen Limin (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-01-13 07:33
Large Medium Small

Hackers attack Baidu; Iran govt denies connection

Baidu, China's largest Internet search engine, was the target of a four-hour cyber attack yesterday, the most severe since it was established in 1999.

The company said it had restored services for most Internet users by 6 pm.

A hacker group, calling itself Iranian Cyber Army, hijacked Baidu's home page and left a message in Farsi saying that the act was a protest against foreign involvement in Iran's domestic politics.

Related readings:
Hackers attack Baidu; Iran govt denies connection Search engine Baidu confirms cyber-attack
Hackers attack Baidu; Iran govt denies connection Report: Search engine Baidu.com hijacked

The attack resembles the one that took down Twitter, the US-based microblogging service provider, last month, in which a group also calling itself Iranian Cyber Army claimed responsibility.

"It is unprecedented," Li Yanhong, CEO and founder of Baidu, said of the incident in a forum run by the company.

In a statement yesterday, Baidu apologized to Chinese netizens for the inconvenience caused by the cyber attack.

It noted that attackers did not try to break into the servers of Baidu but attacked the domain name registrar used by Baidu, which is based in the US. "It is a new phenomenon and sounds an alarm (for online security)," it said.

At about 7:40 am, Baidu went offline and at times displayed an image consisting of Iran's national flag, words in Farsi and a torn national flag of Israel, a result of Baidu.com being redirected to a website located in the Netherlands.

A screenshot of the defaced site showed an announcement in English that read: "This site has been hacked by Iranian Cyber Army". The sentence below declared in Farsi the establishment of "Cyber Iran to protest the intervention of foreign and Israeli sites in our internal affairs and distribution of false news".

The Iranian embassy in Beijing rejected any speculation that the cyber group is related to its government and warned that someone may use the attack to damage the friendly relations between China and Iran.

"We do not have any information about this group," Mohammad Ali Ziaei, the press officer of the Iranian embassy in Beijing, said, referring to the Iranian Cyber Army.

"It surely doesn't belong to our government," said Ziaei. "Hacking is illegal and we condemn this illegal action," he added.

According to Baidu, hackers ambushed the website by modifying the Domain Name System (DNS) records for the Baidu.com domain after hijacking the servers hosting these records.

Anyone equipped with the right skills could hack websites in this manner and claim to be the Iranian Cyber Army, said Liu Siyu, an engineer at Rising, a Chinese security software company.

Compared with directly infiltrating Baidu's own heavily-armored servers, experts said this kind of cyber attack is relatively easy, because the server hosting Baidu.com's DNS records is managed by a New York-based company, Register.com, that hosts companies other than Baidu.

The hackers are believed to have broken through Baidu's account at Register.com and gained access to alter Baidu's DNS records, redirecting visitors to another server, apparently the same tactics used to knock Twitter offline last year.

Records at Register.com show that Baidu has been using the company's services since October 1999, when the search engine provider was established.

Wang Xing contributed to the story

主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产一区二区三区久久久 | 另类小说久久 | 久久精品一区 | 欧美一区不卡 | 色爽女| 一级片网址| 欧美成人免费在线视频 | 国产精品自产拍 | 国产情侣在线视频 | 国产又黄又爽又无遮挡 | 亚洲视频观看 | 日韩欧美中文字幕在线播放 | 成人久久网站 | 亚洲天堂精品在线 | 日韩aaaaaa | 欧美日黄| 91女人18毛片水多国产 | 99热er| 日韩在线视频不卡 | 黄色免费一级片 | www深夜成人a√在线 | 少妇高潮流白浆 | 黄色片久久久 | 国产成人综合网 | 久久久免费精品 | 久久久小视频 | www天天操| 国产色悠悠 | 欧美日韩免费在线 | 成人免费看片视频 | 999精品免费视频 | 一本色道久久综合亚洲精品按摩 | 精品国产网| 久久久久久久久爱 | 国产第页 | av在线你懂的 | 国产手机视频在线 | 噼里啪啦国语在线观看策驰24 | 久草福利在线观看 | 成人看片 | wwwxxx亚洲|