Unknown claim to hack Russia’s central bank, threat to release secret papers

This week, a Twitter account claiming to be affiliated with the Nebulous hacking group Anonymous said it had hacked Russia’s central bank and plans to reveal 35,000 papers uncovering “secret agreements” over the next 48 hours. was made.

In a video released shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine a month ago, the hackers group declared a cyber war on Russian President Vladimir Putin. At the end of February, anonymous Declared in a video on Twitter: “Soon you will feel the wrath of the world’s hackers.”

So far, the organization claims it has complied with its threat. Hackers belonging to Anonymous said they hacked Russian state TV networks and momentarily halted programming to show footage of attacks on Ukrainian buildings in an interview with the BBC earlier this week.

The Russian government maintains tight controls on the country’s media, while Putin passed a law earlier this month that makes reporting contrary to the government’s official stance on the Ukraine conflict illegal.

While Western countries have increased sanctions against Russia in an effort to cut it from international trade and the international banking system when Putin launched the war against Ukraine, Anonymous has taken a more unorthodox approach towards the country.

It threatened any organization that did not cease operations with Russia, tweeting, “We once again call out companies that continue to operate in Russia: if you are being violently massacred in Ukraine.” If you feel sorry for the innocent people, then immediately stop your activity in Russia. Your time is running out. We do not forgive. We have not forgotten.”

Several logos of companies like Acer, Lenovo, Emirates and AstraZeneca were also added to the tweet.

However, the Twitter handle retweeted a post which claimed that the Central Bank of Russia had been hacked and attached some screenshots of the documents.

But soon the bank’s press department told the Russian news agency TASS that information about a possible hacking attack on any of the regulator’s systems is false.

However, earlier this month members of the group offered the Russian military $52,000 in bitcoin if they left their tanks on the battlefield.

In form of conflict in ukraine The tussle, the fight is increasingly being waged online.

Squad 303 was a gang of Polish hackers that created a website that allowed individuals to send text messages to random Russian phone numbers, telling them what was happening in Ukraine.

According to reports, the group has claimed that more than 20 million SMS and WhatsApp messages have been sent through this service.

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