back to article Hacker posts personal details of 6m Chileans

A hacker with a point to prove posted personal details on 6m Chileans on the internet after lifting the information from government websites. The unidentified hacker posted data including names, telephone numbers, addresses and educational details on two websites (IT site FayerWayer and community site ElAntro) after stealing …

COMMENTS

This topic is closed for new posts.
  1. Justin
    Thumb Down

    What an a**e

    Yes, good to prove the point that the system is insecure, but was it really necessary to put 6 million records out in the public domain? Couldn't the individual have put the details of a handful of ministers and public servants who were responsible out there instead? It would have made the point without potentially subjecting 6 million people to id fraud and myriad of the other crime.

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Pirate

    "Police are investigating the attack."

    But not, of course, the criminally negligent adminstrators of the systems that the data came from.

    So nothing will change.

    Except that the next hacker to help themselves to everyone's data won't announce that they've got it and will just quietly sell it to criminals.

    Sigh. So many heads. So much sand. Waaaay too few clue-bats for them all.

  3. Aaron Harris
    Linux

    How old fashioned

    Why hack the government sites when you can just wait until TNT ship the disks direct to your door or local rubbish tip or road side.....

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Italians..and englishmen go out in the midday sun

    Fancy that, the Italians posting tax information of its citizens online, couldn't happen here in the UK could it?

    Oh yes it can! I think our government is just as inept.

  5. Rodrigo
    Unhappy

    A few yummy morsels in addition

    The government spokesman admitted to digital illiteracy, as if it was an asset.

    emol.com, one of the large newspapers here in Chile, printed a screen capture with readable (and usable) download links, further spreading the "word"

    ...and now, of course, the government websites are now denying they were ever breached.

    *sigh* too cold for bananas bur nevertheles...

  6. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Chilean road tax system

    When I lived in Chile the government released an online system for applying for the road tax. All one had to do was enter the car registration number and up popped a screen to pay the tax. However, it also displayed the current owners address, RUT (national ID #), car reg #, and some other spurious data I have forgotten. No SSL was used during the session.

    Needless to say we went outside into the car park, noted down peoples car reg numbers, and pulled up their details. For fun, not gain.

    Next stop, I emailed the webmaster and a few others to explain why this was a bad idea. I never had a reply and the website remained the same up to the day I left the country.

    Anonymous.

  7. michael

    re:Italians..and englishmen go out in the midday sun

    "Fancy that, the Italians posting tax information of its citizens online, couldn't happen here in the UK could it?

    Oh yes it can! I think our government is just as inept"

    our goverment dose not have that lvl of computer compertance to post things on line they post them in cds

This topic is closed for new posts.