Saddam's Inbox Hacked 764
MotorMachineMercenar writes "Wired News is reporting that Saddam Hussein's email account
(press@uruklink.net)
has been hacked into. The account had a five-letter login with the same password. Messages in his inbox sent from all over the world included everything from death threats to business propositions to offers to sell him WMDs. A choice quote from the article: 'One AOL user sent Saddam a one-word message: 'Imminent.' Attached to the Aug. 6 e-mail was a photograph of an atomic mushroom cloud.' I wonder what the login was."
You'd think it was "press," password "press," but if it were that obvious I think someone would have said so.
Other good news for Saddam (Score:5, Funny)
Plus, thanks to the miracle of herbal viagra, he'll soon be able to sustain an erection all night, and please many women in bed!
hmmm (Score:5, Funny)
Re:hmmm (Score:3, Funny)
Uruks from Iraq? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Uruks from Iraq? (Score:5, Funny)
Send this message to Saddam:
Uruk Hi!
Somebody set us up the bomb.
We get signal.
What happen?
Main Screen, turn on.
It's you!
How are you? All your base are belong to us!
You are on the way to destruction.
What you say?!?
You have no chance of survive! Make your time! muhahah muhahahaha!
You know what you doing!!!
Move oil for great justice!
Sincerely,
George W. Bush
Sounds like something from a GW press conference
Re:Uruks from Iraq? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Uruks from Iraq? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:hmmm (Score:4, Funny)
Has anyone checked to see if the password is 12345 [imdb.com]?
Re:hmmm (Score:5, Funny)
I'm waiting for the U.N. to send in Web Inspectors.
Hoax? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Hoax? (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand, if it's true, whomever "hacked" the account and told the press probably only duplicated a hack already done by the NSA, and caused Saddam to close the hole. Good job, bonehead!
Re:Hoax? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hoax? (Score:5, Insightful)
Iraq's government is very, very different from ours in a lot of ways (duh) but it's still a government, and thus a bureaucracy, and all bureaucracies have certain aspects in common. The people who read the e-mail addressed to "press@uruklink.net" and those who read the e-mail addressed to "president@whitehouse.gov" would probably be able to fit quite nicely into each other's jobs.
Re:Hoax? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hoax? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hoax? (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not an American but I'd like to point out that occasionally swapping between Democrats and Republicans is NOT a regime change.
Here is the WHOIS note contact ama_72@yahoo.com (Score:5, Interesting)
Kinda wierd to think the most clear and present danger to the free world uses a yahoo address for there administrators.
Registrar:domaininfo.com
Domain Name: URUKLINK.NET
[Owner of domain name]
osama khalid
27 april street
baghdad, 0000
IQ
[Administrative contact]
khalid, osama
27 april street
0000 baghdad
IQ
Email: ama_72@yahoo.com
Phone: +964 1 5372494
Fax: +964 1 5434731
[Technical contact]
khalid, osama
27 april street
0000 baghdad
IQ
Email: ama_72@yahoo.com
Phone: +964 1 5372494
Fax: +964 1 5434731
[Zone contact]
khalid, osama
27 april street
0000 baghdad
IQ
Email: ama_72@yahoo.com
Phone: +964 1 5372494
Fax: +964 1 5434731
Record created: 29 May 2000
Record last changed: 22 Nov 2001
Record expires: 29 May 2005
Nameserver: nic1.warkaa.com (62.32.60.1)
Nameserver: nic2.warkaa.com (62.32.60.2)
Re:Here is the WHOIS note contact ama_72@yahoo.com (Score:3, Interesting)
<meta name="GENERATOR" content="Microsoft FrontPage5
Does this mean that M$ is bad or that Saddam's web "designers" are stupid?
Re:Here is the WHOIS note contact ama_72@yahoo.com (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hoax? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hoax? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hoax? (Score:5, Insightful)
--
Saddam Hussein
President, god, and super nice guy (because I said so).
Iraq, country of milk and honey
(964)(1) 718-9267 (phone)
(964)(1) 885-2286 (fax)
"This issue is not inspectors, the issue is disarmament."
- GWB
Re:Hoax? (Score:4, Insightful)
All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:5, Funny)
Hack inbox for great justice
Seriously, when are people going to learn that short usernames with the username as the password are a bad idea? Maybe the US should bomb everybody whose email is stupidly secured like that?
Re:All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:5, Funny)
I think you mean the US should set him up the bomb.
Re:All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:5, Funny)
Your grammar is atrocious! For future reference:
"I think you mean the US should set up him the bomb."
Re:All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:3, Informative)
Someone should go back and moderate my previous post -1 Idiot.
Re:All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:3, Funny)
Makes you wonder... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:5, Insightful)
An objective analysis of both W's record and Saddam's record reaveals that Saddam has a much worse record on human rights. It's funny and popular to say otherwise on Campus, maybe, but last time I checked, the US government doesn't maintain a specially horrific prision for the children of dissidents, doesn't gas its own citizens, doesn't execute military officers by the hundreds, doesn't explicitly repress free speech, etc. Which the Iraqi government, controlled by Hussein, does.
Regardless of whether or not attacking Iraq is a good idea, saying what you said kind of makes you seem like a moron, because it's absolutely factually incorrect, and it lessens the impact of any argument you try to make.
The worst Republican, on his worst, conspiracy-laden, evil, money-grubbing day is better than Saddam Hussein on his best, most charitable, not-killing-people day.
Re:All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:3, Informative)
If you set parameters like that, I have to disagree. Rumsfeld says he's letting people go from Guantanamo, meaning that all those people who said wait, you can't just imprison people who may be innocent were almost on the money. They only missed the part where they used may be instead of are. If you pick a day where Saddam isn't actually killing people, he's obviously doing no worse than this.
I wouldn't have taken the poster literally- and with stuff like the above going on, his figurative point is easy to make.
Re:All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:5, Informative)
Oh really?
US germ war tests on civilians [dissidentvoice.org]
Tuskegee syphilis experiment [pbs.org]
more [lp.org]
US eugenics program [commondreams.org]
more [africana.com]
Intentional radiation of civilians during nuclear testing [mothersalert.org]
more [radiationsurvivors.org]
Gulf War Syndrome, which was at first completely ignored and lied about, and finally recently acknowledged (although we still don't know what it is, nor do we know whether the government really knows or not - there have been accusations of experiments on our own soldiers).
not to mention:
Genocide of indigenous peoples as official policy [iearn.org]
by the way, this shit was [is?] still going on in uncomfortably recent history still going on [mit.edu]:
Supposedly, Himmler kept a framed photograph of a Native American, as a reminder of the splendid example the United States provided.
The list goes on and on. Sure, Saddam may be a war criminal. But our own history is not so rosy...in fact it is pretty fucking disgusting and we need to wake up to that fact. We don't have the moral highground we profess to have. In fact Iraq's entire history pales in comparison to the atrocities that have been committed in the names of US citizens. This doesn't make either right. It makes both wrong.
Re:All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:5, Insightful)
an aside (Score:5, Interesting)
-l
Re:All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:4, Insightful)
Point 2: Forgive me if I reserve a healthy skepticism of the naivete and innocence of those who perpetrated "accidental" civilian casualties and ailments during the course of experimentation. Vague enemies on the other side of the planet are eternally convenient, yet, inexcusable, reasons for such behavior.
Point 3: I never made the claim, and neither does the article, that the US was trying to infect any group with AIDS. The point is, the US has been in violation of the Genocide Convention (I was not aware of this particular convention), perpetrating involuntary sterilizations as recently as 1976! With similar callousness, according to this article, the US apparently used sub-par or experimental vaccines on Native Americans.
I didn't make this stuff up. Just because they don't teach it to you in namby pamby middle school US history doesn't mean it is not real. Search Google yourself. Better yet search your library. This stuff is historical fact, not speculation. We just refuse to acknowledge the dirty portions of our past...which I think does ourselves a disservice - especially when we expect to use our moral highground to sidestep international law and treaties to "do the right thing".
As far as our history with dealing with Native Americans, I suggest:
Rethinking Columbus: The Next 500 Years [amazon.com]
The sooner we dislodge the fantastic myth, and somberly acknowledge and admit to our real past, the sooner we become a better people.
Re:All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:5, Interesting)
Plus, a lot of these were less than 50 years ago. The Sarin, Soman, Tabun and VX civilian tests were from 1962-1973 and the Native eugenics was in 1976. That was only 12 years before Saddam used Sarin on the Kurds.
The original poster is certainly wrong when they said GW is worse than Saddam, but GW's only been in power for 2 years, Saddam's been there for 23. I think if you add up all the atrocities the U.S. government has done in the last 23 years (known and unknown, to it's own people and to foreigners) it would outpace what Saddam has done in that time, but then again, the U.S. has a lot more influence over the world.
Re:All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:4, Informative)
That said, Iraq is probably the only Arab country where women can wear whatever they want, fully participate in political life (well, to the same limited, oppressed amount the men can, anyway) and have full legal equality in both professional and personal domains. It's better to be a woman in Iraq than to be one in Saudi Arabia, or Kuwait, or even Egypt. To some extent, that's due to the nature of the Baath party's platform, and also to the fact that Saddam is a very secular thug.
Re:All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:3, Informative)
Bahrain [nytimes.com] held an election this week in which women could both vote and run for office.
Re:All Saddam's email are belong to us! (Score:3, Informative)
Kuwait's biggest political problem is its failure to provide basic civil and political rights for the majority of its residents, of course - the majority of residents are non-Kuwaiti "guest workers".
Hear that? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hear that? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's not scary, THIS is scary (Score:5, Funny)
Password (Score:5, Funny)
Password? in english? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Password? in english? (Score:4, Funny)
Remember our friend from last year [slashdot.org]?
Now if you'll excuse me, I'm gonna play some Doom 3.
Re:Password? in english? (Score:4, Insightful)
You make a valid point, but English does seem to be the lingua franca of the interweb, even (apparently) among contries at the "axes of evil". The site seems to largely be in English, so the people running it presumably are English speakers as well. I can say, just from some of the foreign-born students I've known, that people that learn a technical subject in a particular language will tend to think in that language when practicing the craft, even if otherwise they speak something else. (For example, a Russian friend who studied aeronautical engineering as his father did, but couldn't discuss the subject with his dad because he only knew the English terms for everything & didn't know how to express the same concepts in his native language.)
So, like I say, I think your point is insightful, but at the same time I don't think it's unreasonable that the un/pw would have been English terms if the rest of the site was also English (as, from the little I poked around, it seems to be).
WMD (Score:3, Informative)
WMD = Weapon of Mass Destruction. Not obvious, IMHO.
Re:WMD (Score:5, Funny)
. . . . How exactly do you send someone an e-mail trying to sell them a weapon of mass distruction?
Sadam,
You have been approved.
You can receive a thermo-nuclear warhead!
Did You Know?
-There are No special requirements to obtain these weapons.
-These are weapons that you NEVER have to repay!
Sadam,You Qualify!
Click Here
Limited Time Offer!
Credit where credit is due, slightly OT (Score:3, Informative)
Mod parent down (was: Re:Mod parent up) (Score:3)
You could not possibly be serious. If you have read any single issue of any newspaper during the last year you must have seen that acronym. And the latter part of your comment is just hilarious. It hasn't featured in a Slashdot headline, so you couldn't know about it? Want them to clarify who Saddam is too? He doesn't frequent Slashdot headlines all to often either.
Sorry for flamebating/trolling/whatever, but really, try to get out of your cubicle just a little more often, willya?
I wonder.... (Score:5, Funny)
To: Madmn@aol.com
From: GWBush@whitehouse.gov
Subject: Hahahahaha
Prepare your Camels, 'cause we're about to get medeviel on your scud-launching ass. And if you use Bio weapons, you won't stop glowing for a LONG time. And don't think you can bankrupt us. We use weapons on you, we order more, our side gets more jobs. So let us in, or we'll come down on you like the hand of god.
Party on,
GWB
Re:I wonder.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I wonder.... (Score:3, Funny)
From: GWBush@whitehouse.gov
Subject: Re: Hahahahaha
Forgot to add: If you are going to send the big bad Republican Guard after us, please be sure to equip them with white flags and THEIR own hand restraints. It was quite annoying last time to have to resort to plastic ties.
Oh, oh, and please pass out white flags. We'd hate to accidently kill one of the many thousands trying to surrender.
And once again, use bio weapons on us, and we'll do something truly evil back: Feed your people. Including the Kurds.
We have food
Are you afraid?
Down with Iraq
Down with Iraq
GWB.
Re:I wonder.... (Score:5, Interesting)
You know, I can't help but thinking that in another time and another place, Saddam and Dubya would have been good buddies, probably frat brothers. They both have an insatiable appetite for the good life, they both make all their money from oil, they both affect a religious piety when it suits them, they both love to be a "man of the people". This isn't as unlikely as it sounds, George Bush junior once owned a company (Arbusto Energy) jointly with one of Osama bin Laden's many brothers.
What the world really needs is for one of Dubya's daughters (not Jenna, the other one) and one of Saddam's sons to fall in love. Then, after many Baz Luhrmann-esque antics their fathers can be reconciled, and live happily ever after on a ranch in the sovereign state of Texraq.
Re:I wonder.... (Score:5, Funny)
With Tony Blair co-starring as Mini Me?
My god it's all starting to make sense!
Best wishes,
Mike.
Re:I wonder.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Gotta love guilt by association.
Re:I wonder.... (Score:3, Funny)
CONFIDENTIAL PURPOSE (Score:4, Funny)
That's what I want to know.
Have I been trolled? (Score:5, Interesting)
This isn't Saddam's address. It's his press handlers address. That's like judging me based on the feedback send to my webmaster@foobar.com address.
Re:Have I been trolled? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not about judging Sadam but judging the kind of folks that think they're sending him email.
Online dating.. (Score:5, Funny)
It just strikes me funny to think of Saddam illegaly downloading mp3's and such and cackling insanely about driving our economy to the brink.
Great Onion Headline: (Score:4, Funny)
What does Saddam's SPAM look like?? (Score:5, Funny)
TO: Saddam Hussein or unnamed email recipient
FR: Devry Universit
Subj: Boost your career with a Bachelor's or Master's degree in nuclear technology!!
he got this email too (Score:5, Funny)
I send you this plutonium in order to have your advice.
See you later. Thanks
Woo... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Woo... (Score:4, Funny)
Could it be a plant? (Score:4, Interesting)
I think it's a hoax.
_Saddam's_ inbox? (Score:4, Informative)
CIA In Trouble (Score:3, Funny)
According to the USA Patriot Act (Score:5, Interesting)
My favorite message (Score:5, Funny)
And I'll raise you a "5G" and a Death Star
That's nothing ! (Score:5, Funny)
I hacked Mr Bush's email box, and I found a letter with This Picture [tviund.is], signed "-- Saddam".
examples of leaders' bad passwords... (Score:5, Funny)
Dark Helmet: "That sounds like the combination an idiot would have on his luggage!"
<snip>
President Scrooge: "One two three four five? I can't believe it! I have the same combination on my luggage!"
Y2K-Not OK! (Score:5, Funny)
The version of webmail software used by the Iraqi ISP is known to have several security holes -- but the patches available for them do not appear to have been applied.
from uruklink.net website:
October28
like Y2K?
In related news (Score:5, Funny)
So who exactly did the hacking? (Score:5, Insightful)
Assuming they did do the hacking, this is ethical... how? Does this mean they figure it's all right to hack into anyone's e-mail and publicize the results? What if it were your e-mail?
It may have been a nifty trick that someone happened to guess the right password, but as journalism, this is beyond the pale. I'd like to see someone from WIRED News comment a little more specifically on who the hacker was, why his or her name wasn't disclosed, and how WIRED justifies reporting on the hacked contents of an e-mail account, and where they draw the lines.
Journalistically speaking, (Score:5, Interesting)
The contents were probably awfully mundane, perhaps too much so to qualify for The People Must Know, but one could imagine at least in theory that they might have found something interesting in there.
There is precedent for this: For a big example, consider the Watergate scandal. The New York Times wasn't "supposed" to be in possession of that material, and they certainly weren't "supposed" to publish it, but The People Must Know overrode their reservations, and most of us would consider that the right decision based on the info they had at the time.
On the other hand, hacking into my email and telling the world about it would be unethical; there is no need for anybody to know what's in there, so they'd just be rumormongering.
What, you say this "The People Need To Know" is an awfully fuzzy [jerf.org] criterion to be using? Damn straight! These ethical things are hard.
(Remember, I'm playing devil's advocate here; I don't believe it's black and white, but I do think there is a strong kernel of truth here.)
All involved US corporate leaders arrested! (Score:4, Insightful)
I hope that all U.S. corporate leaders involved are immediately arrested and charged with treason or some other appropriate offense. This is wrong on so many levels it churns my stomach. The arrogance of these people astound me to no end.
I sincerely hope this is a hoax but somehow I can see that it's possible.
If there is truth to U.S. business attempting to solicit business with Saddam Hussein, then I expect to see reports of arrests and investigations in the news. But I can already hear the paper shreading machines in operations and the degausing machines humming...
Gaiacomm Technical Docs (Score:3, Informative)
Great phrases like:
"Mathematical expressions have been eliminated to allow the reader to interpret the words and draw pictures in his mind to see what I, and so many others in the past have discovered but were afraid to write about or do until now."
"The frequency dependence of attenuation in the earth ionosphere wave-guide channel is known but will not be disclosed in this paper."
"If after reviewing all the this data including the above written data, if the reader still does not have a clear understanding then it is clear that the reader does not have the ability to think outside the circle (remember, my condition at the outset?)"
Definitions of acronyms like ATM and CDMA at the end, although none of those terms are discussed in the document.
Read it, laugh your head off!
Still vulnerable? (Score:5, Interesting)
-port 110 is opened
-it reveals they're running Ipswitch IMail 7.07
-this software has a known overflow and exploit on the web client side
-http://mail.uruklink.net:8383/ is opened.
What are their sysadmin waiting to shut down 110/8383? Wake up!
Side note, it's funny to see that they are running an american OS and mail software..
Re:Still vulnerable? (Score:3, Funny)
Somehow, I doubt they're sleeping, nor their families, except in the morbid, metaphorical sense of 'to sleep' that Hamlet uses in his soliloquy.
Re:Still vulnerable? (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, astoundingly they didn't feel like using anything from the huge Iraqi software market!
Some people just have no sense... (Score:5, Funny)
The part I thought most comical was the people writing to warn him that the CIA would be after him and to exercise caution, or with ideas on how to win a war. Yes, I'm sure Saddam fired off a hardcopy of that e-mail, brought it to his War Ministry and they all read it in awe.
"By the grace of Almighty Allah, skater601@aol.com has shown us the road to salvation!"
Jeez, people can be so dumb...
/. is a weapon of mass destruction.... (Score:5, Funny)
President Skroob (Score:3, Funny)
Official Body Count! (Score:3, Funny)
IIs : 1
Apache : 0
Is using IIs really worth the risk? Please, think before you deploy IIs.
Ominous date (Score:3, Interesting)
Tor
The password is... (Score:3, Funny)
Same as the code on G.W. Bush's luggage.
No more hacking Saddam's inbox? (Score:4, Informative)
Alas, the user/pass is not "press"/"press", nor a mispelled "sadam"/"sadam". Ah, well.
Jouster
Re:No more hacking Saddam's inbox? (Score:4, Informative)
Jouster
Re:No more hacking Saddam's inbox? (Score:3, Interesting)
The changes are propogating across DNS now... "webmail.uruklink.net" is now a private address in the 10.0.0.0/8 class A!
Jouster
New way to combat spammers.. (Score:3, Funny)
To: Saddam, Subject: MAKE MONEY FAST!!!
To: Saddam, Subject: Generic Viagra! $2.50 each!
To: Saddam, Subject: Increase your penis size!
Wouldn't it be so nice to close down spammers because they're breaching UN trade sanctions? Maybe you could even get them charged with treason.. Muahahaha
Re:Yeah....how do you know that was his account? (Score:5, Informative)
I'm going to guess that "the e-mail address listed on the offical homepage of the Iraqi presidency" would be a good indicator it belongs to him.
Re:Scary (Score:5, Insightful)
The US hasn't in modern times seen widespread destruction on home turf, we still remember it vividly.
If the US could prove to European leaders (and European population) that Iraq is indeed the threat the US makes it out to be, then I'm sure European nations would also support military action and possibly be a part of it, as most have stated, they want a UN mandate first. But, the "He dun tried to kill mah paw" argument isn't that convincing on the European side of the pond.
Re:Scary (Score:5, Insightful)
Hey guys, just to make the argument clearer could you please make a distinction between Saddam and his cronies and the people/country of Iraq. I'm sure many Europeans (and hopefully Americans) would consider themselves pro-Iraq if we are talking about the country and people, but anti-Iraq if we are talking about Saddam and his cronies.
Re:Scary (Score:3, Informative)
IF action is taken, it must be such that no one will have to go back and redo it again 10 years from now.
Re:Scary (Score:5, Insightful)
I would have hoped you also saw the result of NOT using force when it should have been...like keeping Hitler from rearming after WWI.
I am not trying to be a troll or leave the wrong impression, but Saddam and his crew are not the types you want to have that kinda stuff. The U.N. knows it and made resolutions to prevent it...unfortunately, none of them are being enforced.
There were agreements made to stop the last war...like weapons inspectors that wouldn't be interferred with etc. Saddam isn't abiding by his side of the deal, so the other side isn't bound to the ceasefire either. This has very little to do with GWB wanting to kill him because of his father...and that is a really really lame accusation, IMHO.
Re:Pearl Harbor ring a bell? (Score:5, Insightful)
No - we have more than enough history... your history, as a matter of fact. We understand these things very well, thank you, which is why we go to great lengths to keep our homeland from experiencing the sort of things that have happened elsewhere in the world.
So - what next? Are you going to claim that only someone who dies from lung cancer is smart enough to know that smoking is dangerous?
Re:Fake? (Score:3, Funny)
about a year ago, the most hated man in america was, without a doubt, another mid-eastern man.
and he probably still should be, too.
but hey, since we can't find him, lets listen to dubya and go finish daddy's business so we can get that pesky economy off of our minds!
*end sarcasm*
Re:Free weather service (Score:3, Funny)
Q: Whats the 7 day forecast for Afghanistan?
A: Three days.