A weekend cyberattack campaign targeting Israeli government Web sites failed to cause serious disruption, Israeli officials said yesterday. The attacks followed warnings in the name of the hacking group Anonymous that it was launching a massive attack.
Yitzhak Ben Yisrael, of the government’s National Cyber Bureau, said hackers had mostly failed to shut down key sites.
“So far it is as was expected, there is hardly any real damage,” Ben Yisrael said.
“Anonymous doesn’t have the skills to damage the country’s vital infrastructure. And if that was its intention, then it wouldn’t have announced the attack of time. It wants to create noise in the media about issues that are close to its heart,” he said.
Posters using the name of the hacking group Anonymous had warned they would launch a massive attack on Israeli sites in a strike they called #OpIsrael starting yesterday.
Israel’s Bureau of Statistics was down yesterday morning, but it was unclear if it was hacked. Media said the sites of the Ministry of Defense and the Ministry of Education, as well as banks had come under attack the night before, but they were mostly repelled.
Israeli sites reported brief cyberattacks on the stock market Web site and the Ministry of Finance Web site on Saturday night.
However, the two institutions denied the reports.
Israeli media said small business had been targeted. Some homepage messages were replaced with anti-Israel slogans, media said. In retaliation, Israeli activists hacked sites of radical Islamist groups and splashed them with pro-Israel messages, media said.
Hackers have tried before to topple Israeli sites.
In January last year, a hacker network that claimed to be based in Saudi Arabia paralyzed the Web sites of Israel’s stock exchange and national airline and claimed to have published details of thousands of Israeli credit cards.
A concerted effort to cripple Israeli Web sites during fighting in Gaza in November last year failed to cause serious disruption. Israel said at the time that protesters barraged Israel with more than 60 million hacking attempts.
An official of the militant Hamas movement that rules the Gaza Strip praised the current attack.
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