Afficher les éléments par tag : piraté agence de service informatique, webdesign, graphisme et agence de communication partagé pour les PMEs au Luxembourg, France et Belgique https://www.noemiconcept.com Wed, 26 Feb 2025 21:24:24 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management fr-fr Sony piraté ... trois fois de plus https://www.noemiconcept.com/index.php/fr/departement-communication/news-departement-com/194376-sony-piraté-trois-fois-de-plus.html https://www.noemiconcept.com/index.php/fr/departement-communication/news-departement-com/194376-sony-piraté-trois-fois-de-plus.html

Sony vient d’essuyer trois nouvelles attaques. La première remplaçait la page d’accueil de Sony Thaïlande et demandait leurs identifiants et codes de cartes aux usagers.

La seconde a dérobé des points de fidélité en hackant So-Net, une filiale japonaise de Sony.Enfin le site grec SonyMusic.gr, s’est fait dérober ses bases de données utilisateurs : identifiants, vrais noms et adresses email…

Ces piratages n’ont à priori pas de liens avec la catastrophe du 20 avril. Mais qui peut dire que s’en prendre à Sony n’est pas tendance, en ce moment chez les hackers ? Dans le cas de So-net, les points dérobés ont une valeur de 1225 dollars. La base de données de SonyMusic.gr a quant à elle été postée anonymement sur internet…

Comme nous le disait V. Guyot, expert en sécurité informatique, « il est impossible de sécuriser à 100% un système connecté à Internet ». Sony en fait les frais… Pour en savoir plus sur l’énorme piratage de Sony en avril, lire Sony: les zones d'ombre du piratage de la PS3.

  • sony
  • piraté
  • hacké
  • sonyMusic
  • ps3
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    olivier@noemiconcept.com (Administrator) News Technologique-Tech News Tue, 24 May 2011 15:00:36 +0000
    May 31, 2006: Pirate Bay Raided, Shuttered https://www.noemiconcept.com/index.php/fr/departement-communication/news-departement-com/194825-may-31-2006-pirate-bay-raided-shuttered.html https://www.noemiconcept.com/index.php/fr/departement-communication/news-departement-com/194825-may-31-2006-pirate-bay-raided-shuttered.html

    May 31, 2006: Pirate Bay Raided, Shuttered

    2006: Swedish police raid The Pirate Bay website and shut it down.

    “Pirate Bay was a huge source of pirated films for people around the world, and today they are no longer.”

    That was a statement issued exactly five years ago Tuesday by Kori Bernards, a spokeswoman for the Motion Picture Association of America.

    After all, Swedish police that day had just raided the file sharing site’s offices and carted away a boatload of servers.

    May 31, 2006: Pirate Bay Raided, Shuttered

    2006: Swedish police raid The Pirate Bay website and shut it down.

    “Pirate Bay was a huge source of pirated films for people around the world, and today they are no longer.”

    That was a statement issued exactly five years ago Tuesday by Kori Bernards, a spokeswoman for the Motion Picture Association of America.

    After all, Swedish police that day had just raided the file sharing site’s offices and carted away a boatload of servers.

    Dan Glickman, the MPAA’s chairman at the time, also said something ironic that day.

    “The actions today taken in Sweden serve as a reminder to pirates all over the world that there are no safe harbors for internet copyright thieves,” he said.

    But the site was back online three days later, after finding hosting in the Netherlands.

    And today, after playing cat-and-mouse games to defy court orders to shutter, the site is hosted by the Pirate Party — despite the raid leading to the arrest and convictions of the site’s four founders who face prison and multimillion-dollar fines.

    The Pirate Bay, now 8 years old, sports some 25 million unique users. The site, at one point up for sale, acts as a conduit enabling the online pirating of videogames, movies, music and software, using the BitTorrent protocol.

    Torrent Freak notes that the site is upgrading its hardware, housed in an undisclosed mountain cave in southern Sweden, “in order to keep serving the ever-growing number of users.”

    Pirate Bay administrators Fredrik Neij, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg and Peter Sunde were found guilty of facilitating copyright infringement in 2009, along with Carl Lundström, who was convicted of funding the operation. They were each sentenced to a year in prison and $3.8 million in fines. They said the court system was biased against them.

    The Stockholm prosecution was brought by the Swedish government and Hollywood, in what’s best described as a joint civil-criminal trial. The defendants were charged with facilitating copyright infringement. They remain free, pending appeal to Sweden’s highest court.

    • Technique
    • hacker
    • piraté
    • police
    • The Pirate Bay
    • Kori Bernards
    • Dan Glickman
    • Sweden
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      olivier@noemiconcept.com (Administrator) News Technologique-Tech News Tue, 31 May 2011 12:00:00 +0000