AOL Says Hackers Broke Into Some Member Accounts

Published: 19 June 2000 y., Monday
America Online Inc. said vandals had broken into its AOL service and gained access to an undisclosed number of member accounts, highlighting the vulnerability of even the world's largest Internet services provider to the threat of hacker attacks. The software virus attack appeared to be similar in kind, but by no means in scale, to the ``ILOVEYOU'' virus that temporarily paralyzed tens of millions of computers last month, penetrating networks in government and companies worldwide. ``A small number of member accounts may have been illegally viewed,'' America Online spokesman Rich D'Amato said Friday. ''We are aware of claims that a small number of member accounts were illegally accessed. We take these claims seriously,'' he said. The perpetrators of the attack targeted AOL customer service representatives with e-mails containing a ``Trojan horse'' attachment, that, when opened, created a connection to the sender's computer and allowed access to some AOL accounts. He stressed that the hackers involved did not appear to have gained access to AOL's 23 million-member database of subscribers, or data on users of other services that include CompuServe, Netscape Netcenter, ICQ and other popular sites.
Šaltinis: Yahoo! News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

E-Mail Virus Slams Muslim Group

Executives at the American Muslim Council are mad as hell. more »

Intel's accidental revolution

The foundation of modern computing was something of an accident. more »

New Nokia Phone Takes AIM

America Online's popular AIM instant messaging application has found a home on cell phone service offered by VoiceStream Wireless. more »

ICANN: To Serve and Protect

The deadly attacks of September 11 didn't just give us tighter airport checkpoints, new wiretapping and surveillance laws, and countless metric tons of explosives air-lifted to Afghanistan. more »

Osama Family's Suspicious Site

For the price of registering a domain name, a 30-year-old Web designer from Los Angeles has bought a bizarre piece of Internet history. more »

NTT DoCoMo Steps Up War Against Wireless Spam

Japan's NTT DoCoMo has unveiled new weapons in its war against junk e-mail more »

Telephony Speech Recognition Coming Of Age - Datamonitor

The use of speech recognition technology in telephone call centers is about to enter the mainstream more »

University Error Exposes Kids' Psychological Info Online

The information breach exposed the names and diagnoses of children and teenagers being treated for such conditions as schizophrenia, retardation and depression. more »

Wearable Computers in Fashion

Smart shirts embedded with optic fibers can monitor wearer's condition and transmit data wirelessly. more »

Hacker 'Doctor Nuker' Claims FBI Fingered Wrong Person

A computer hacker who vandalized a pro-Israeli group's Web site said law enforcement officials have issued an arrest warrant for the wrong person. more »