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  • Vandals Deface Vietnam Memorial Web Site

    PC World

    Vandals Deface Vietnam Memorial Web Site

    Both the virtual and physical memorial endure periodic
    defacement attacks.

    Gregg Keizer, Computerworld

    Saturday, September 22, 2007 1:00 PM PDT

    A Vietnam War memorial Web site run by veterans was defaced in recent
    days by a "hacker" who left messages attacking the U.S., Israel,
    Armenia and the Kurds, the Washington Post reported in Thursday's
    issue.

    According to the Post, visitors to the Vietnam Veterans Memorial site
    who searched for casualties by date were redirected to a page that
    displayed the Turkish flag, a short video, and messages in both
    Turkish and English. One of the messages in Turkish read in
    translation: "Is there any equal or likeness to our martyrs at
    Gallipoli?"

    The newspaper assumed the message referred to the Battle of Gallipoli
    during World War I. In 1915, an Allied attempt to force passage
    through the Dardanelles to supply Russia was defeated by the Turks,
    whose Ottoman Empire had sided with Germany and Austria-Hungary
    against Britain, France, Russia and others.

    Both Kurds and Armenians were targeted by Turks for genocide in this
    and the previous century.

    Someone identified as "Turk Defacer" took responsibility for the hack,
    which was reported to the site by several hundred visitors. The group
    that operates the site, the 4/9 Infantry Manchu (Vietnam) Association,
    removed the defacement and restored the site late Wednesday.

    Zone-H, a Web site that maintains the world's largest defacement
    database, had no listing for the hack. Searches there for known
    hackers going by the name Turk Defacer located two, but neither had
    been pegged with a defacement this year.

    The site was hacked less than two weeks after the physical Vietnam
    Veterans Memorial was defaced with an unknown oily substance that
    National Park Service police said had been splashed on at least 14 of
    the 140 polished granite panels. Names of the men and women who died
    or were declared missing are etched on the panels.

    The Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, which built the wall, has offered
    a $5,000 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction
    of the perpetrator, while the Park Service is cleaning the soiled
    panels.

    Prominent Web sites are regularly vandalized by hackers. Last month,
    for example, the United Nations' site was plastered with messages
    accusing the U.S. and Israel of killing children. The name of the
    group that assumed responsibility for that defacement had been
    previously linked to Turkish hackers.
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