Hackers leak Comelec database, plans to leak financial accounts next

Hacker group Lulzsec Pilipinas has leaked online the Commission on Elections’ website database shortly after it was defaced by Anonymous PH.

Lulzsec Pilipinas announced on their Facebook page that they were able to obtain 340GB worth of data from the commission’s website. The data was then uploaded to the group’s website and made available for the public to download.

The group also said in a Readme text included in the leaked files that “some of the tables are encrypted by Comelec,” but added that they have the algorithm to decrypt the data.

In their most recent Facebook post, the group also announced that they will also leak the financial accounts of Comelec employees.

The post Hackers leak Comelec database, plans to leak financial accounts next appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines News & Tech Reviews.

Hackers leak Comelec database, plans to leak financial accounts next

Hacker group Lulzsec Pilipinas has leaked online the Commission on Elections’ website database shortly after it was defaced by Anonymous PH.

Lulzsec Pilipinas announced on their Facebook page that they were able to obtain 340GB worth of data from the commission’s website. The data was then uploaded to the group’s website and made available for the public to download.

The group also said in a Readme text included in the leaked files that “some of the tables are encrypted by Comelec,” but added that they have the algorithm to decrypt the data.

In their most recent Facebook post, the group also announced that they will also leak the financial accounts of Comelec employees.

The post Hackers leak Comelec database, plans to leak financial accounts next appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines News & Tech Reviews.

Anonymous PH defaces COMELEC website

Anonymous PH members have successfully defaced the Commission of Elections website, and in turn, extracting data from it.

anonymous-comelec

This comes after a call from the local hacktivist’s of a more transparent election system through implementation of the security features on the Precinct Count Optical Scanner (PCOS) machines that will be used in the upcoming May 9 elections.

“One of the processes by which people exercise their sovereignty is through voting in an election- where people choose the candidates who will best represent them, who will serve them under the principle that “Public office is a public trust.” But what happens when the electoral process is so mired with questions and controversies? Can the government still guarantee that the sovereignty of the people is upheld?” said the group on their Facebook Page.

Along with the defacement, Lulzsec Pilipinas have also managed to obtain the whole database coming from the website. COMELEC’s web address remains inaccessible as of the moment.

More as we get it.

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Kaspersky Lab warns PH Steam gamers of account stealers

A new breed of malware known as Steam Stealer is the prime suspect in stealing numerous user accounts from Valve’s flagship platform, Steam. Kaspersky Lab warns us, Filipinos, to be careful enough to secure our gaming identities.

steam-stealers

Having over 100 million registered users, Steam is one of the most popular entertainment multi-OS distribution platforms. Going by recent reports, 77,000 Steam accounts are hijacked and pillaged every month.

Dubbed as the Steam Stealer, the goal of this malware is to steal online gaming items and user account credentials, and then resell them on the black market.

According to Kaspersky Lab, it works with a malware-as-a-service business model that steals the entire set of Steam configuration files. Once this is done it locates the specific Steam KeyValue file that contains user credentials, as well as the information that maintains a user’s session. When cybercriminals have obtained this information, they can control the user’s account.

This type of business model isn’t new, and the accounts are commonly sold to black market for about $500. But in the case of the Steam Stealers, they sell the accounts for no more than $30. This makes the malware highly attractive for wannabe cybercriminals all around the world.

Kaspersky Lab researchers strongly believe that the malware was originally developed by Russian-speaking cybercriminals since they found a number of language traces in several underground malware forums.

Here in the Philippines, there are low incidents of recorded Steam Stealer infiltration, but gamers still need to stay vigilant and maintain their gaming identities private.

“The number of monitored Steam Stealer attacks against Filipino gamers are minimal compared to those recorded in Russia, US and Europe. But those few incidents can increase anytime. says Anthony Chua, Territory  Channel Manager for the Philippines and Singapore at Kaspersky Lab Southeast Asia.

To do this, they provided three pillars of basic gaming security:

  • Beware of phishing campaigns and unfamiliar gamers. Double check the website you are redirected to via the link in the received email and the extension of a file you are going to open.
  • Use strong and unique passwords. Lots of accounts get hacked as a result of weak password management. Alternatively, you can also use a password manager.
  • Do not turn off your antivirus! If you don’t have one, install a good solution. And a special tip for all Kaspersky users: here you can find a detailed manual on how to turn on the Gaming Profile option. It will optimize settings of all antivirus components.

{Kaspersky Lab}

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A pandemic of TV ads: How, where, when 4 wannabe presidents did it

ALMOST LIKE A PLAGUE, the political ads of four candidates for president, five for vice president, and two dozen other candidates for senator and local posts have started to assault our TV screens starting March 2015, or 14 months ahead of the May 9, 2016 elections.

All together worth P6.7 billion, by media’s published rate cards, these pre-campaign ads have turned this year’s balloting into the priciest ever in the country’s electoral history.

Who paid for the ads? The candidates have variably said that their unnamed donors, and/or portions of their own money, covered the expense.
But why ever must donors part with their millions when only the candidates stand to gain from political ads? And how, some citizens have asked, should the candidates pay back these donors who gave them not just money but also a quick ride to instant celebrity and fame on TV?

By Nielsen Media’s monitoring reports, overkill is an understatement. It does not suffice to describe the stupendously rich pre-campaign ad spend of four candidates for president — Jejomar Binay of the United Nationalist Alliance; Rodrigo Duterte of PDP-Laban; Grace Poe of the Galing at Puso slate; and Manuel ‘Mar’ Roxas II of the Liberal Party.

Specific to the last detail, Nielsen Media’s reports enroll the day, date, and time, and in which TV programs the ads aired; their rate card cost at the time of broadcast; and which versions of the candidates’ ad materials ran.

So the people may know, PCIJ has decided to reveal the full details of Nielsen Media’s reports on the TV ads that featured four candidates for president as “advertiser” and “product” from March 2015 to January 2016.