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Friday, 25 July 2008
 
 
Last week attacks
O.S.  Defs.  %
Linux  5378  68.98%
Win 2003  1841  23.61%
Win 2000  290  3.72%
FreeBSD  166  2.13%
MacOSX  67  0.86%
Other  54  0.69%

Total attacks: 7796 of which 2243 single ip and 5553 mass defacements

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The Internet Thermometer PDF Print E-mail
Written by Administrator   
Wednesday, 15 March 2006

 

The scope of this section is to show that the Internet (server side) is truly vulnerable. In order to do this, we think that the best way is to monitor web defacements. Why web defacements? Because we demonstrated over the past years that the web defacements are performed using the same techniques used by serious cyber-criminals when doing nastier things than a deface.

There are four sub-sections available in the Internet Thermometer main section (all available on the left menu):

Attacks archive: it's the list of all the web defacements received. It shows automatically the newest database entries but it includes also a filtering section that, once enabled, allows to craft fine-tuned queries to the whole database.

Attacks archive  (special): it's the list of all the web defacements received marked as special (important or well knows websites are marked as special). All the governmental servers are marked as special, the scope is to monitor those servers that, at least in theory, should be more protected that any average server. The section shows automatically the newest database entries but it includes also a filtering section that, once enabled, allows to craft fine-tuned queries to the whole database.

Attack notification: from this section anybody can submit anonymous information about a hacked server.

Attacks on hold: this section shows the latest notified attacks but not yet verified by zone-h (all the entries gets manually verified one by one).

 

DISCLAIMER: all the information contained in Zone-H's cybercrime archive were either collected online from public sources or directly notified anonimously to us. Zone-H is neither responsible for the reported computer crimes nor it is directly or indirectly involved with them. You might find some offensive contents in the mirrored defacements. Zone-H didn't produce them so we cannot be responsible for such contents.

If you are the administrator of an hacked site which is mirrored in Zone-H, please note that Zone-H is not related at all with the defacements itself.

Don't ask us to remove the mirror of your defaced website, as a cybercrime archive Zone-H's mission is to keep the entries in the database.

All the self-produced material belongs to Zone-H. You are free to use it as long as proper credits to Zone-H are reported as by the CCPL license reported below.

Zone-H is not responsible for the use/misuse of the information published, you can use it at your own risk.

 

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