From: Spam the President <president@whitehouse.gov>
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UTC Datetime: 1998-05-09 13:48:25 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 9 May 1998 06:48:25 -0700 (PDT)
From: Spam the President <president@whitehouse.gov>
Date: Sat, 9 May 1998 06:48:25 -0700 (PDT)
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: U.S. Navy caught hacking into British marine charity Web site
Message-ID: <355450B4.28BA4217@whitehouse.gov>
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http://www.infoworld.com/cgi-bin/displayStory.pl?98058.winavy.htm
U.S. Navy caught hacking
into British marine
charity Web site
By Kristi Essick
InfoWorld Electric
Posted at 3:07 PM PT, May 8, 1998
The U.S. Navy has been caught attempting to
break in to secure areas of a World Wide Web
site sponsored by a U.K. marine-mammal
preservation charity, according to officials at the
organization.
The Whale and Dolphin Conservation Society
(WDCS) -- which operates an online shopping
site aimed at generating money for the welfare of
the animals at http://www.wdcs-shop.com --
said it was alerted to the attempted break-in last
week by its site-hosting company, Merchant
Technology Ltd.
"We were working late one night, and a
command line request came in wanting to access
unauthorized areas of the site," said Andy Fisher,
marketing manager for Merchant. "We were
amazed to find out it was the Pentagon."
Merchant built and manages the secure
electronic-commerce site for the conservation
society and routinely keeps an eye on who visits.
If users attempt to gain access to unauthorized
areas, the company is alerted to the source of the
incoming request.
At 9:45 p.m. GMT on April 28, Fisher said,
workers at Merchant were shocked to see an
incoming attempt to breach security by a user
identified as donhqns1.hq.navy.mil.
Merchant got in touch with WDCS immediately,
only to find out that the charity had been
contacted by the Navy a few weeks earlier. The
Navy was interested in obtaining a report the
group is working on that details the efforts of
Russian animal experts to train dolphins in the
Black Sea for military tasks, such as finding and
attaching probes to submarines, Fisher said.
A WDCS representative said that there is
nothing secret about the Russian government's
activities in this area but that the document does
contain information about the export of the
trained dolphins to foreign countries. The group
declined to give the Navy a copy of the report
only because it was not complete at the time.
Once it is made final, the report will be published
and the Navy can then examine it, the
representative said.
The WCDS said that it is confused about why the
Navy would attempt to break in to its Web site.
"I think whoever it was within the U.S. Navy
facility would have better things to do rather than
try and hack into our computers," said Chris
Stroud, the organization's director of campaigns,
in a statement. "If they were seeking reports on
the Black Sea, we shall be freely publishing these
in the near future anyway."
The WCDS previously has commented
unfavorably on Navy activities such as its
low-frequency sonar trials off Hawaii and on
ship collisions with endangered whales, the
group said.
Merchant says it is "100 percent sure" the
hacking attempt originated from the Navy.
WDCS has notified the U.S. Embassy in London
and the relevant U.K. authorities, the
organization said.
"We hope that the U.S. authorities have some
rational explanation for this incident," Stroud
said.
"The Navy has not yet received a formal
complaint on the issue," said a Navy official, who
declined to be named. "Until the Navy receives a
formal complaint with details, there's not much
we can do to proceed further."
Merchant Technology Ltd., in Bath, England, can
be reached at 44 (1225) 481 015. The Whale and
Dolphin Conservation Society, also in Bath, can
be reached at 44 (1225) 334 511 or
http://www.wdcs.org.
Kristi Essick is a London correspondent for the
IDG News Service, an InfoWorld affiliate.
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