Anonymous has launched FBI-Scotland Yard talks

NewsThe hacker group "Anonymous" on Friday released a telephone conversation between FBI and Scotland Yard executives regarding the activity of "hackers"… 

Anonymous uploaded the conversation they stole on YouTube, along with a text message written by an agent of the US Federal Police who organized the teleconference on January 17.

"The information was intended exclusively for law enforcement officials and was obtained illegally," the FBI said in a statement, adding that an investigation had been launched to locate the perpetrators.

The video, which accompanies the video, calls on European officials to attend the conference to discuss issues related to cybercrime, such as Anonymous, Lulzsec, Antisec and others.

"The information was intended exclusively for law enforcement officials and was obtained illegally," the FBI said in a statement, adding that an investigation had been launched to locate the perpetrators.

The video, which accompanies the video, calls on European officials to attend the conference to discuss issues related to cybercrime, such as Anonymous, Lulzsec, Antisec and others.

The message was sent to the police in Britain, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden and Ireland, but only members of Scotland Yard and the FBI were heard in the video.

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Anonymous also posted a message on Twitter, referring to YouTube, noting that the FBI "will be wondering how we have been able to read its internal messages for a long time."

Sophos software security firm Graham Clayley said in his blog that the pirates probably hacked into an agent's email.

"Undoubtedly, the police will be amazed that the people they are trying to arrest can listen to their internal conversations," he added.

In the video, British and American police report some of the targets of their investigations, such as Jake Davis and Ryan Cleary, two British teenagers who were arrested last year for cyberbullying.

The other names do not sound clear.

Davis is accused of spying on websites such as the British anti-organized crime service (SOCA), which was attacked last June and has been down for several hours.

Cleary is being held by a Lulz Security gang involved in cyberbullying, a group that broke away from Anonymous.

At one point, a British police officer thanked his American counterpart for helping him examine Cliri's hard drive.

A little later, he talks about a "pirate" from the West Midlands of Britain with the nickname "tehwongz".

"He's a 15-year-old who does all this to get attention and he's a little stupid," he is heard saying.

Last month, Anonymous shut down the websites of the FBI and the Department of Justice for several hours, and in late 2010 they attacked the websites of Amazon, Visa, MasterCard and PayPal.

Source: FIRST TOPIC