LulzSec Says it Hacked into U.S. Senate Site

It would be the group's first U.S. government intrusion

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The hacking collective Lulz Security says it has breached the Web site for the U.S. Senate, issuing on its own site "a small, just-for-kicks release of some internal data" from Senate.gov. The hackers, known for their taunts and mischief, wrote on the site, "is this an act of war, gentlemen? Problem?" They were apparently referring to the story from earlier this month that cyber-attacks would be considered acts of war by the Pentagon. The group today also released source code and database passwords for the video game maker Bethesda Softworks, a subsidiary of ZeniMax Media.

The group has been on quite a tear the last couple of weeks, hacking the Web sites for PBSSony, an FBI security affiliate, and meeting a challenge from an Internet security firm, as well as a effecting a very polite intrusion into the inner workings of the British National Health Service. The hack into Senate.gov, though, if it's for real, marks the first breach of a U.S. government site by the group. A Senate spokeswoman told the Wall Street Journal "she was unaware of any breach of the body's web site."

This article is from the archive of our partner The Wire.