The Web sites of British and North American media organizations and retailer Walmart’s Canadian unit were hacked on Thursday in a suspected attack by the Syrian Electronic Army, an amorphous hacker collective that supports Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
Among media sites hit were London newspapers the Daily Telegraph, Independent and Evening Standard. The Canadian Broadcasting Corp (CBC) and the New York Daily News also said they had fallen victim to the hack.
Users attempting to access certain parts of the attacked Web sites found a message that read: “You’ve been hacked by the Syrian Electronic Army (SEA)” and were then redirected to the group’s logo, an image of an eagle bearing the Syrian flag and a message in Arabic.
The group posted on its Twitter feed, referring to Thursday’s US Thanksgiving holiday: “Happy thanks giving, hope you didn’t miss us! The press: Please don’t pretend #ISIS are civilians. #SEA.”
The affected companies said that their systems were safe.
Walmart Canada said some of its customers received an unusual pop-up message, but that no systems were compromised nor customer data exposed.
CBC, Canada’s public broadcaster, also said the Syrian hacking group did not gain access to its systems or servers.
A Twitter account affiliated with the Syrian group posted an image that appeared to show it accessed the GoDaddy account of gigya.com, a company that helps businesses identify those who visit their Web sites.
Gigya counts the NFL, NBA and NHL professional sports leagues, and media outlets including CBC, CBS, NBC, Forbes, CNN, al-Jazeera and Fox among its customers. It was not immediately clear how many of them were affected.
Gigya said a breach at its domain registrar, GoDaddy, resulted in traffic to its site being redirected, but that the problem had since been fixed.
GoDaddy did not immediately respond to requests for comment.
“To be absolutely clear: Neither Gigya’s platform itself nor any user, administrator or operational data has been compromised and was never at risk of being compromised,” Gigya chief executive officer Patrick Salyer said in a blog post.
The hackers rerouted Gigya’s Web traffic by tweaking the company’s Web address on Internet registry Whois.com so that it would point visitors to the outside server. The registry entry on Whois.com was fixed about an hour after the company detected the breach, Salyer said.
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