For users of the Internet Archive, also called the "Wayback Machine," Thursday October 10 was an unpleasant surprise when users discovered the site was offline. What happened was the website was hacked. When people logged on, instead of the normal page, they saw this message:
Have you ever felt like the Internet Archive runs on sticks and is
constantly on the verge of suffering a catastrophic security breach? It
just happened. See 31 million of you on HIBP!
Bleeping Computer would say, "The text 'HIBP' refers to the Have I Been Pwned data
breach notification service created by Troy Hunt, with whom threat
actors commonly share stolen data to be added to the service."
The nature of the hack seems to be in dispute. Some are calling it a Directed Denial of Service attack. Others are calling it a data breach that "stole a user authentication database containing 31 million unique records."
Forbes quoted a cybersecurity expert as saying, "“Hacking the past is usually technically impossible but this data breach
is the closest we may ever come to it. ... The stolen dataset includes
personal information but at least the stolen passwords are encrypted."
Forbes would also say "While the identity behind the data breach exposing 31 million users
remains unclear, the pro-Palestinian hacktivist group Black Meta has
claimed responsibility for the DDoS attacks that took down The Internet
Archive."
Sources: Forbes, Bleeping Computer.com, Cyber News
Bixyl Shuftan
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