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              | Date: 2002-03-16 
 
 IN: Cybercops wurden gehackt-.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.-
 
 Auch wenn das National Crime Records Bureau, laut  Bericht des indischen
 Financialexpress ansonsten hohen Wert auf IT-Investigationen legt, kaum sichtbares
 Interesse zeigt, den Hacker der eigene Site zu verfolgen -  haben täten sie ihn schon
 gern.
 
 Den anonymen Zugang zum FTP/WWW-Server 164.100.103.126 hat man nicht
 abgedreht, dahinter wurde allerdings dicht gemacht, zumindest gegen den üblichen Set
 der ftp-Commands.
 
 Server: Microsoft-IIS/5.0 Content-Location: http://164.100.103.126/Default.htm Date: Sat,
 16 Mar 2002 19:18:43 GMT Content-Type: text/html Accept-Ranges: bytes Last-
 Modified: Fri, 01 Mar 2002 12:28:52 GMT ETag: "de136da51cc1c11:8f9" Content-Length:
 4573
 
 post/scrypt: Wer hat da schon wieder was von einem Honig/topf gesagt?
 
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 Nivedita Mookerji Friday, March 15, 2002
 
 New Delhi: One crime that the National Crime Records Bureau (NCRB) will not like to
 enter in its own computerised data bank is the hacking of its own site. The nodal agency
 of the home ministry - NCRB is perhaps too busy chasing distant outlaws, completely
 ignoring the one at home.
 
 The home page of NCRB, http://ncrb.nic.in has links to most of the state police
 departments. But what one finds in the link to Calcutta Police (NCRB has not changed
 to Kolkata yet) is something that NCRB would not like to investigate  sure methods of
 increasing virility and sex drive!
 
 The hacker seems to be of American origin or at least has US connections, considering
 that the pornographic material is typically yankee in nature. Therefore, for a minute, one
 can pardon NRCB. For, it happened with the link to Calcutta Police that was involved in
 the investigations of the recent American Centre incident.
 
 But what surprises most is that while the hacker uploads the page daily, NCRB has
 obviously not visited the site for days on end. If they have, and have yet not carried out
 any action, it calls for a bigger explanation. Maybe, like the Indian politicians, the police
 also takes action only if a foreign hand is suspected. And if it is a neighbourly foreign
 hand, the action is faster. But then, will Calcutta Police continue to boast the drive of a
 different nature?
 
 Technology is the new buzz in Indian police. Whether in criminal investigation or traffic
 management, IT is the mantra.
 
 But the mindset still seems to be old and rustic.
 
 [...]
 
 But will someone please stand up and own up the responsibility for not having checked
 the Calcutta Police site?
 
 This hacked site was discovered just when NCRB officials were busy explaining the IT
 initiative in the high profile home ministry agency.  For their claims.
 
 Full story
 http://new.financialexpress.com/fe_full_story.php?content_id=4621
 
 
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 edited by
 published on: 2002-03-16
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