South African hacker history

A brief history of computer hacking in South Africa.

Note: A distinction needs to be made between a "white hat" hacker who hacks out of intellectual curiosity, and a "black hat" hacker who has ulterior motives. In recent times there has been an attempt to restore the meaning of the term hacker, which is still associated with creating code, and its secondary meaning, which has become the stuff of Hollywood legend. The term "cracker" is a better description for those who break into secured system by exploiting computer vulnerabilities.

1990 edit

Activists are trapped by BOSS agents who use ATM autotellers to monitor transactions. IBM is now the subject of an ongoing court case for its active support of the apartheid regime.[1]

1991 edit

Cape Educational Computer Society (CECS) becomes the first to advocate free software culture in South Africa. Many hackers gain their first experience of online world via Douglas Reeler's modem. Also in 1991, Kagenna Magazine publishes an article on Cyberpunk by Dr Tim Leary, the first time the word is mentioned in print in South Africa.

1994 edit

A right-wing hacker attempts to sabotage election results by hacking into the computers processing election results of South Africas first democratic election.[2]

2004 edit

A group of computer hackers calling themselves "Spykids" strikes 45 Cape Town business websites and defaces their home pages.[3]

1998 edit

Police arrest a teenage boy from Rondebosch who hacked through all the security features of South African telecommunications company Telkom's computer system but apparently did no damage.[4]

The DA party website is defaced by a hacker.[5]

1999 edit

Hackers break into South Africa's official statistics website, replacing economic information with critical comments about the national telephone company, Telkom.[6]

2005 edit

"Team Evil", a group of Moroccan hackers, defaces 250 South African websites on the afternoon of 8 January, with anti-American propaganda.[7]

2006 edit

First National Bank, Standard and Absa banks are the targets of several successful online attacks. The financial institutions report that no less than 10 bank accounts have been hacked. The value of the damages caused by the attack is estimated at 80.000 dollars.[8]

2008 edit

H.O.Z, currently the largest South African hacker community goes online, and quickly gains a reputation for bypassing local cell network internet restrictions[citation needed]. Although authorities have been unable to pin point the master minds[peacock prose] behind the incidents, S.A. anti-cyber terrorism, vows to stay tunes to its community members and hopes one day to put a stop to these elite[peacock prose] members of its hacking community, they will be paying close attention to its site owner EVILWez.[9][irrelevant citation]

South African Minister for Finance and Economic Development, announces 32 arrests in connection with more than 80 separate fraud counts related to spyware and the loss of (13m pounds) R130m.[10]

2009 edit

Hackers expose corrupt business practice in the banking system - a confidential document detailing information about South African banks is published by Wikileaks.[11]

2010 edit

The second Live Hacking 2010 South Africa ethical hacking workshop was held in Pretoria.[12]

Courses in ethical hacking are offered.[13]

Gauteng's department of local government's website is hacked by CeCen Hack Team who appear to be a radical Islamic group[14]

HackingStats.com an online resource "monitoring and documenting hacked South African-based websites" goes online.

2011 edit

Police unit, The Hawks announce they are on the verge of making further arrests in connection with the a "multi-million rand cyber raid" on the Land Bank over the Christmas season.[15]

2012 edit

Three government websites were hacked in December by a lone activist apparently angered at South Africa's support for the Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic in Western Sahara.[16]

2013 edit

"South Africa needs to be saved and freed from corruption", says Team GhostShell, but luckily it has assembled a "strong force" of hacktivists equal to the task. That force will now break into government information vaults and bring to light the evidence that will reveal corruption and nefarious doings."[17]

Through a series of tweets 'data dump' using the account @DomainerAnon, explained that they hacked into the website “for the 34 miners killed during clashes with police in Marikana on August 16, 2012”.[18]

References edit

  1. ^ "The Use of Computers to Support Oppression".
  2. ^ "Book says hacker tried to stop Mandela coming to power". BBC News. 26 October 2010.
  3. ^ http://www.crime-research.org/news/2004/01/Mess1202.html
  4. ^ "ISN 1998/11: [ISN] South Africa police arrest teen hacker".
  5. ^ "Hacker compromises DA website - the Mail & Guardian". 15 August 2008.
  6. ^ "BBC News | Africa | Hackers deface SA stats site".
  7. ^ "Moroccan hackers blamed for website blitz".
  8. ^ "Three South African Banks Hit by Hackers". 4 July 2006.
  9. ^ "RICA doomed for failure?".
  10. ^ "Computing - the UK's leading source for the analysis of business technology".
  11. ^ "Hackers expose South African banks". Archived from the original on 2 October 2011. Retrieved 26 January 2011.
  12. ^ "Second Live Hacking Workshop in South Africa an Overwhelming Success | Hacker Journals". Archived from the original on 17 March 2012. Retrieved 25 January 2011.
  13. ^ "Certified Ethical Hacker Course Cape Town Training CEH Certification Classes South Africa". Archived from the original on 16 December 2010. Retrieved 25 January 2011.
  14. ^ "Gauteng local government website falls prey to hackers". www.mg.co.za. 27 January 2010. Archived from the original on 30 January 2010.
  15. ^ http://www.gatvol.co.za/latest-news-south-africa-crime/hawks-closing-in-on-cyber-hackers.html [dead link]
  16. ^ "BusinessLIVE".
  17. ^ "GhostShell doesn't quite hack South Africa - The Mail & Guardian". 30 January 2013.
  18. ^ "SAPS website hacked: Report | the New Age Online". Archived from the original on 8 June 2013. Retrieved 22 May 2013.