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Police Association of Ontario hacked by Anonymous

Posted on June 26, 2015 by Dissent

The announcement of a hack of the Police Association of Ontario was made by @ro0ted on Wednesday:

Round 4.. #OpC51 #OpBillC51 #Anonymous http://t.co/UFb7dJbPjT – Police Association of Ontario https://t.co/7pS2kW0AzX pic.twitter.com/0CiGDYl2sF

— ro0ted (@ro0ted) June 24, 2015

The attack continues the hacktivism over C-51, Canada’s controversial new anti-terrorism bill.

The data dump, which is still available as of this morning, includes some admin information with hashed passwords, as well as user information and 420 members’ information, including first and last name, location, userid, email address, and passwords. A backup member file contains 454 members’ information.

There does not appear to be any statement on the PAO’s web site in response to the attack.

And I’m really beginning to wonder about Canadian news media, as their biggest news outlets do not seem to be reporting on such hacks.

 

Category: HackMiscellaneousNon-U.S.

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1 thought on “Police Association of Ontario hacked by Anonymous”

  1. Moi says:
    June 27, 2015 at 8:49 pm

    “Canadian news media”, especially the “biggest news outlets”, are owned by the Telco’s.

    News slanting has been in the media recently when it was revealed that Bell was preventing news from being seen by Canadians on CTV that Bell did not like. CRTC went public about it. Bell Media head was fired.

    Makes me wonder if the Police Association has their services on (or run by) one of Canada’s “vertically integrated” telco’s? Honest question.

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