| The Sports Network brought down by Chinese Hackers |
|
Wow. Saw this in a passing tweet from someone in China on Twitter really late Sunday night (technically Monday morning at 2am-ish) As I'm writing this, mainstream media hasn't picked up on it yet. Once again, Twitter breaks news first. Here's a screenshot of what the Sports Network site looks like right now.
Update 1: Andrew Lih got in contact with The Sports Network in PA and got more info. My insomnia and Twitter addiction also got a mention on TechCrunch. Twitter friend @mrrich based in Beijing also comments on his blog here. ok, here is where i'm a bit confused...i assumed there was a CNN affiliation which is why the Chinese hackers brought The Sports Network site down to begin with. The original link that the tweet referred to was http://sports.si.cnn.com i just assumed (and maybe the Chinese hackers did too?) that The Sports Network was owned or affiliated with CNN somehow. either way, IMHO it's a bit careless also of Sports Network to come right out and call them a "political entity" -- that only serves to fan the flames without proof that it really is a political entity. Update 2: Just checked the Sports Network site at 4:10am (don't ask why i'm still up) and here's what I see live:
...ok wtf, as soon as i tweeted about it, it went back to the error message. i swear i wasn't seeing things. I grabbed the above screenshot with Skitch and DM'd @TechCrunch to further confirm that poor Sports Network was a target by association with CNN. The "HACK" and cnn.com image was actually animated on the site. Wow. If this is a sign of things to come, it's not looking good for other sites. Something tells me they thought they were hacking CNN's site. I'm not sure what the exact affiliation is between CNN and SportsNetwork.com but they're apparently being targeted as a result of wanting to target CNN. Wishful thinking but I hope things calm down soon as the Chinese nationalists need to understand that actions such as this only serves to add to the downward spiral before the Olympics. Update 3: Here are some good blog posts and resources with more insight into the anti-CNN movement among Chinese internet users and hackers.
If you're on Twitter, another great way to stay up to date is to follow all the folks that @ChinaList (see them tweeting away on the right of this blog?) is following. It's a list I put together of English speaking Twitter junkies, many who are westerners living/working in China with first hand insight on what's going on there. A lot of good folks to strike up a conversation with if you want to stay up to date before traditional "news" gets around to covering it. here is a cache in Google of what the link for http://sports.si.cnn.com page looked like before:
here's what the Google cache of the http://sportsnetwork.com URL looked like before:
...even all the previous syndicated news on Sports Network's servers are getting error messages. If you do a search on Google News for "Sports Network" all their links lead to pages that look like this:
Powered by !JoomlaComment 3.12 Copyright (C) 2007 Alain Georgette / Copyright (C) 2006 Frantisek Hliva. All rights reserved. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| < Prev | Next > |
|---|
really interesting. hope to find more interesting reading
It was nice of you to pick something rated PG to quote Roman on.
Christine,One tweet, one speech, one minute hug and a picture -- a handful ...
Congrats! That must've been pretty awesome. You both kick ass!
Christine,Yes, other than being a San Jose Sharks Fan (Go Chicago Blackhawk...