It seems a group of usernames and passwords published by Anonymous hacktivists yesterday “are not accurate,” according to a security advisory obtained by The Atlantic Wire.
Yesterday, Anonymous claimed that it had created a “pivotal moment” for Congress after stealing over 2,000 usernames and passwords for hill staffers in an anti-PRISM protest. The group, tweeting under the handle “OpLastResort” said that it is watching the government closely as it figures out how to deal with the recent reveals around a government surveillance program called PRISM.
But a security advisory sent out to staffers, “Early today, hackers disclosed over 300 Senate email addresses and passwords. We have confirmed that the posted credentials are not accurate, and many disclosed accounts are long expired. Affected offices are being notified.”
Anonymous said that the passwords were shuffled and not all of the passwords were published. It further said on its Twitter that the list came from a senate.gov subdomain. The Atlantic Wire suspects that the list could have come from an external emailing service called iConstituent. A former staffer confirmed that the password listed under her name on Anonymous’ leak sheet wasn’t created by her, but by a “third party email vendor.”
It seems others on the list were also past staffers.
Filed under: Security

Meghan Kelly 19 Jul, 2013
enclosure: http://venturebeat.files.wordpress.com/2012/07/photo9.jpg?w=160
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Source: http://venturebeat.com/2013/07/18/anonymous-congress-passwords/
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