Friday, 29th March 2024
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Anonymous claims hacking of State House websites in support of #Endsars

Hackers collective Anonymous Saturday said it has hacked the Nigerian Government website as protests against police brutality in the country continue. The website failed to load after The Guardian several attempts to load it. The State House website is the latest Nigerian government-owned websites that would be attacked by the hackers. The hackers said the…

Hackers collective Anonymous Saturday said it has hacked the Nigerian Government website as protests against police brutality in the country continue.

The website failed to load after The Guardian several attempts to load it.

The State House website is the latest Nigerian government-owned websites that would be attacked by the hackers.

The hackers said the series of attacks on government-owned websites were to support the widespread protests against police brutality in Nigeria.

“International hackers & Anonymous continue the cyber campaign against the government to call out corruption, demand police reform, and show solidarity with brave protestors,” the group said on one of its Twitter handles, quoting a tweet by a certain Lorian Synaro.

The website of the National Industrial Court has been hacked, confidential SARS information and details of hundreds of contracts awarded by the Edo State Government leaked, the Twitter handle of the National Broadcasting Commission hacked.

The websites of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Independent National Electoral Commission, the Nigeria Centre for Disease Control, Lagos State Government, Amuwo Odofin Local Government and that of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission were also tampered with.

Earlier on Friday, National Information Technology Development Agency’s official Twitter handle retweeted a message by Galaxy Backbone, an Internet service provider in Nigeria, advising all government ministries, departments and agencies to enable two-factor authentication on their Twitter accounts to limit chances of being hacked.

NITDA later in the day tweeted an instruction on how to enable the two-factor authentication.

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