Anonymous ID: 5c2d2d Sept. 22, 2021, 3:34 a.m. No.14635450   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5501

Anonymous ? Don't they mean FBI?

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10015763/Anonymous-hackers-dump-150-GIGABYTES-names-passwords-addresses-far-right-website-admins.html

Hacker group Anonymous has released a massive trove of names, passwords and addresses of far-right website administrators, that experts are calling the 'Panama Papers of hate groups'.

 

The intrusion targeted Epik, a Washington-based domain registrar that provides a safe haven to far-right websites, some of whom had been turned away from more mainstream web hosting services.

 

The 150 gigabytes of data are a 'who's who' of Internet - and real-life - trolls. Epik has hosted QAnon home base 8chan, neo-Nazi news site The Daily Stormer and the far-right social media platforms Gab and Parler.

 

Experts say that the vast amount of data could take years to sift through.

 

'It's massive. It may be the biggest domain-style leak I've seen and, as an extremism researcher, it's certainly the most interesting,' Elon University computer science professor Megan Squire told the Washington Post.

 

'It's an embarrassment of riches - stress on the embarrassment.'

Anonymous ID: 5c2d2d Sept. 22, 2021, 3:34 a.m. No.14635451   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5456 >>5463 >>5607

Anonymous ? Don't they mean FBI?

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10015763/Anonymous-hackers-dump-150-GIGABYTES-names-passwords-addresses-far-right-website-admins.html

Hacker group Anonymous has released a massive trove of names, passwords and addresses of far-right website administrators, that experts are calling the 'Panama Papers of hate groups'.

 

The intrusion targeted Epik, a Washington-based domain registrar that provides a safe haven to far-right websites, some of whom had been turned away from more mainstream web hosting services.

 

The 150 gigabytes of data are a 'who's who' of Internet - and real-life - trolls. Epik has hosted QAnon home base 8chan, neo-Nazi news site The Daily Stormer and the far-right social media platforms Gab and Parler.

 

Experts say that the vast amount of data could take years to sift through.

 

'It's massive. It may be the biggest domain-style leak I've seen and, as an extremism researcher, it's certainly the most interesting,' Elon University computer science professor Megan Squire told the Washington Post.

 

'It's an embarrassment of riches - stress on the embarrassment.'