US government’s vaccine website defaced with AI-generated content


A U.S. government website designed to inform the public about vaccines has been defaced and now hosts apparently AI-generated spam.

The domain, which belongs to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), appears to have been hosting the same kind of content — mostly gay-themed and LGBTQ+ posts — since at least May 12, according to an archived version of the site. It’s unclear who is responsible for it, or what is the purpose of this defacement other than pushing AI-generated slop spam. Websites hosted on official U.S. government domains have been hijacked in the past to host scam ads and hacking services.

Read more…
Source: TechCrunch News


Sign up for our Newsletter
The latest news and insights delivered right to your inbox.


Related:

  • What’s In Shodan? Analyzing Exposed Cyber Assets in the United States

    March 15, 2017

    The United States is home to millions of unsecured and exposed cyber assets. By “unsecured” and “exposed” we don’t necessarily mean that these devices have already been compromised. Rather, this means they are vulnerable to cyber attacks due to inadequate security or poor configuration. Some cyber assets may even have remote access enabled for troubleshooting ...

  • NSA hacking chief’s mission impossible: Advising White House on cybersecurity

    March 15, 2017

    NSA hacking crew bossman Rob Joyce is set to join US President Donald Trump’s National Security Council as a cybersecurity adviser. Joyce headed up the NSA’s Tailored Access Operations division, the spy agency’s elite computer exploitation squad. Whispers have been sloshing around since the weekend that Joyce was tapped to shape cybersecurity policy for the Trump administration. ...

  • US Military Security Clearance Files Leak Due to Unsecured Drive

    March 13, 2017

    US Air Force documents were left on an unsecured backup drive, exposing highly sensitive personnel files on over 4,000 senior and high-ranking officers. According to MacKeeper Security Researchers, the gigabytes of files were accessible to anyone because there was no password to protect the backup drive. It seems the information found there varied from names and ...

  • Security Fail: Hackers Drawn to Energy Sector’s Lack of Controls

    March 8, 2017

    Oil and gas companies, including some of the most celebrated industry names in the Houston area, are facing increasingly sophisticated hackers seeking to steal trade secrets and disrupt operations, according to a newspaper investigation. A stretch of the Gulf Coast near Houston features one of the largest concentrations of refineries, pipelines and chemical plants in the ...

  • WikiLeaks reveals CIA files describing hacking tools

    March 6, 2017

    WikiLeaks published thousands of documents Tuesday described as secret files about CIA hacking tools the government employs to break into users’ computers, mobile phones and even smart TVs from companies like Apple, Google, Microsoft and Samsung. The documents describe clandestine methods for bypassing or defeating encryption, antivirus tools and other protective security features intended to keep ...

  • Boeing Notifies 36,000 Employees Following Breach

    February 27, 2017

    A Boeing employee inadvertently leaked the personal information of 36,000 of his co-workers late last year when he emailed a company spreadsheet to his non-Boeing spouse. News of the breach surfaced earlier this month after a letter (.PDF) from Boeing’s Deputy Chief Privacy Officer Marie Olson, to the Attorney General for the state of Washington Bob ...