Hacker attack against socially important actors

Hacker attack against socially important actors

Published: Just now

The hacker group “Anonymous Sudan” has warned that they will carry out attacks against Sweden.

During Sunday, the websites of several Swedish socially important businesses, authorities and companies were down or had major problems.

Here we continuously report on which sites are affected.

  • Right now there is a problem with accessing domsto.se.

    “Due to technical problems, it is not possible to reach the website of the Courts of Sweden”, it says on the website.

    There are also problems accessing SL’s website and travel app, as well as KTH’s and Gotland’s energy websites.

    Anonymous Sudan has previously warned of “a very strong attack” during the afternoon against domsto.se and sl.se, among others.

    In a message on Telegram, the group writes that they will attack violently until they “take everything down”.

  • In Kivra’s app. Photo: Screenshot

    There are still problems accessing Kivra’s website. The same error message comes up: “Error: Server Error”

  • Several sites now seem to be back up after the previous disruptions.

    The websites for MSB, the Swedish Energy Agency, Saab, Tele 2 and SOS Alarm appear to be working as usual.

  • Several of the sites the hacker group said they will attack do not appear to have been affected.

    – We have known about this since earlier this week. This is against homepages. Not against our Bank-id service. Our Bank-id service works exactly as it should, and our website is not down. We have top-notch protection 24/7, says Charlotte Pataky, press officer at Bank-id to TT.

  • The hacker group Anonymous Sudan writes in a message on its Telegram channel that they have attacked Swedish infrastructure because of the Koran burning and that the IT attack will continue until Tuesday.

    In the post, they also mention the Russian hacker group Killnet in a video clip.

    – According to our assessment, the Russian Killnet is behind the attack, says Marcus Murray, security expert at Truesec.

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