Operation World Cup
Submission 15,415
Part of a series on 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil. [View Related Entries]
Overview
Operation World Cup is a cyber attack campaign orchestrated by members of the hacking group Anonymous in protest of the Brazilian government spending public funds on the 2014 FIFA World Cup rather than diverting resources to poorer parts of the country. The campaign resulted in the outage or security breach of dozens of Brazilian government websites.
Background
On May 30th, 2014, Reuters[1] reported that Anonymous was preparing a cyber-attack on corporate sponsors of the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil to protest spending resources on soccer games while parts of the country live in abject poverty. According to a hacker using the alias Che Commodore, hacking targets included Adidas, Emirates airlines, Coca-Cola and Budweiser. The article also reported that 333 documents had been extracted from the Brazilian Foreign Ministry's computing network by a hacker known as AnonManifest, which included a briefing for talks with United States Vice President Joe Biden and a list of sport ministers planning to attend the World Cup.
Notable Developments
Cyber Security Report
On June 2nd, 2014, the technology company Symantec[2] published a "Latin American + Caribbean Cyber Security Trends" report, which outlined several potential World Cup security vulnerabilities and noted that Anonymous had threatened attacks against FIFA websites, corporate sponsors and the Brazilian government.
Anonymous Videos
On June 3rd, the AnonBRNews YouTube channel uploaded a video titled "#OpHackingCup – Let the Games Begin," which criticized the Brazilian government using public funds to build and reform soccer stadiums for the World Cup (shown below, left). On June 10th, the Vimeo channel @AnonymousVideo uploaded a video titled "#OpMundial2014," announcing plans to attack Brazilian government websites for creating "a system which ensures the poor remain poor and the wealthy remain wealthy" (shown below, right).
Cyber Attacks
On June 11th, a Pastebin[3] page was created for updates on activities related to the operation, which listed several Brazilian government websites that had been targeted with DDoS attacks. On June 12th, the Hackers News Bulletin Twitter feed posted a list of websites that had been targeted in the operation.
List of affected websites right now under #OpHackingCup #OpWorldCup
http://t.co/k2Nft6BthU
CharafAnons</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/AnonBRNews">
AnonBRNews pic.twitter.com/kxBfBTdcK5
— Hackers NewsBulletin (@HNBulletin) June 12, 2014
News Media Coverage
In the coming days, several news sites reported on the #OpWorldCup cyber attacks, including International Business Times,[4] Financial Times,[5] Reuters,[6] Mashable,[7] ZDNet,[8] RT[9] and Motherboard.[10]
Search Interest
External References
[1] Reuters – Brazil World Cup Hackers
[2] Symantec – Cyber Security Trends
[3] Pastebin – #OpHackingCup – Activities Log
[4] IBI Times – Anonymous World Cup Protest
[5] Financial Times – Hackers Claim Attacks on World Cup Sites
[6] Reuters – Hackers Claims Attacks on World Cup-related websites
[7] Mashable – Hackers Take Down World Cup-Affiliated Sites
[8] ZDNet – World Cup Websites Struck Down by DDoS Attacks
[9] RT – #OpWorldCup
[10] Motherboard – Anonymous World Cup Hacktivism
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