Skip to main content

Anonymous leaks 10,000 ‘top secret’ Iranian gov’t emails

Anonymous-Sony-hackers-hack-psnHacker group Anonymous has leaked 10,365 “top secret” emails from Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Anonymous says the files were accessed after the group infiltrated the Iranian Passport and Visa Office email center. All the files are currently available for download from MediaFire , as well as various BitTorrent sources.

Most of the emails concern visa applications for “an oil meeting,” according to an unnamed source who spoke with the International Business Times. And “many” of those are reportedly for people “from China.” A quick perusing of the files shows that, in most case, the emails are from Iranian government officials alerting visa applicants of their status.

The initial attack apparently took place a number of days ago, and the Iranian government has been actively trying to keep news of the breach covered up. An Anonymous member said that the attacks were carried out in an attempt to damage Iran’s image in “both cyber space and the real world.” Tehran has yet to admit publicly that the breach and data theft even occurred.

As of this writing, the website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs is still down. According to a user of the #OpIran IRC channel, the attack on the mail servers “is a multi-site incursion using a variety of exploits and hand-crafted methods.” The user added that “the action [against the servers] is considered ongoing,” but said that there is new “information under review.”

“Operation Iran” officially kicked off on May 1, with a declaration by Anonymous — a decentralized, loose-knit group — that it would stand with the Iranian people, who have been repressed by the nation’s government.

“People of Iran – your rights belong to you. You have the right to free speech and free press, the freedom to assemble and to be safe in your person. Your [sic] have the right to live free and without fear. As Labour Day dawns – Anonymous stands with you!” said the group in a statement.

Anonymous has a long history of doing its part to disrupt dictatorial regimes in the Middle East and Northern Africa, including the governments of Egypt and Tunisia, where protests helped launch the Arab Spring, a wave of citizen dissent that swept the region.

According to an Anonymous member who spoke with The Next Web, the group is planning an day of DDoS (distributed denial of service) attack for the anniversary of the Iranian election. No specific targets have been announced, but one members of the group told us that there “is always something in the works.”

“We are still going over what we have, and determining protest-appropriate targets with organizers,” said one Anonymous member, who spoke with us in the #OpIran chat.

When asked if their operations would continue, one Anon said simply: “As long as people are still out there needing our help, things are getting planned.”

Topics
Andrew Couts
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Features Editor for Digital Trends, Andrew Couts covers a wide swath of consumer technology topics, with particular focus on…
8 AI chatbots you should use instead of ChatGPT
Copilot on a laptop on a desk.

When ChatGPT launched in late 2022, it was a novelty. It didn't take long, however, for competition to come along.

Early on, there weren’t many ChatGPT alternatives available that weren’t in-house, research-based options or open source projects on GitHub that required some sort of coding knowledge to set up and operate. But since then, several companies have developed consumer products with free and paid tiers and a plethora of enterprise and developer options. So, if you aren't satisfied with ChatGPT for whatever reason, these are the eight other options to try out instead.
Microsoft Copilot

Read more
Manor Lords performance guide: best settings, recommended specs, and more
Running around a Manor Lords village in third-person.

Manor Lords is the most wish-listed game on Steam at the time of this writing, and from my early impressions, it's an excellent medieval village management simulator. It's like Banished, but taken up a notch. But as impressive and fun as it is already, it's still an Early Access game, which means getting it to run at its best requires a little finesse with the settings.

But you don't need to spend hours painstakingly adjusting your seeings and benchmarking the game, because we've done that for you! After our rigorous testing, we've found the best settings for Manor Lords to give you peak performance so you can enjoy the grubby details of this dark ages setting.
The best settings for Manor Lords
Manor Lords is an immersive single-player experience, so while our settings recommendations are designed to improve performance beyond just setting everything to the maximum or leaving them at defaults, we aren't going to make major sacrifices to visual quality just for a few frames per second (fps).

Read more
Best gaming PC deals: Lenovo Legion, ASUS ROG, Acer Predator
young woman playing video games on a PC

While build a gaming PC from scratch can be very rewarding, especially if you want to save a penny here and there, it takes a lot of work and tech savvy, and is often more than most folks want to deal wih. Luckily, there are some great pre-build PCs that you can take advantage of, and with some really excellent desktop computer deals, you can get something at almost the same cost of you building it yourself. As such, we've gone out and collected our favorite gaming PC deals for you to pick from, with some of the higher end-options being able to easily run the best PC games on the market right now.
Best gaming PC deal for entry-level gamers
Lenovo LOQ Tower -- $850, was $1,150

 

Read more