Experts dis rumored cyber-jihad set for Nov. 11
The possible attack was reported by a military intelligence magazine
IDG News Service - Security experts are saying that a reported al-Qaeda cyber-jihad attack planned against Western institutions should be treated with skepticism.
The attack was reported by DEBKAfile, an online military intelligence magazine. Citing anonymous "counterterror sources," DEBKAfile said it had intercepted an Oct. 29 "Internet announcement," calling for a volunteer-run online attack against 15 targeted sites, set to begin Nov. 11. The operation is supposed to expand after its launch date until "hundreds of thousands of Islamist hackers are in action against untold numbers of anti-Muslim sites," the magazine reported.
Such an attack could be launched with a known software kit, called Electronic Jihad Version 2.0, said Paul Henry, vice president of technology evangelism at Secure Computing Corp. The software, which has been in circulation for about three years, has recently become more easily configurable so that it could be more effective in a distributed denial of service attack, such as the one suggested by the DEBKAfile report.
Attackers would download Jihad 2.0 to their own desktops and specify the amount of bandwidth they would like to consume, not unlike the SETI@home software package used to scan for signs of extraterrestrial intelligence.
However, Henry said that his law enforcement contacts are treating the report with some skepticism. "I talked to a few people today who know of DEBKAfile, who feel they are dubious, but they can be credible," he said. "I'm not looking at Nov. 11 as being the day that the Internet goes down."
Security expert Gadi Evron, who recently studied the cyberattacks in Estonia, expressed similar skepticism.
"DEBKAfile gets a lot of news that no one else has, and fast," he said via instant message. "But it's a community-driven tabloid. Treat it as a golden source to be taken with 5 grains of salt."
Even if an attack is planned, it would likely be nothing new, Evron added. "Cyber-jihad on the level of attacking Web sites happens every day for numerous causes by enthusiasts. The content of this warning is doubtful. There are not hundreds of thousands of infosec workers worldwide, not to mention working for al-Qaeda," he said.
He believes that some low-skilled hackers may be planning something but that DEBKAfile has probably not uncovered plans of a major online attack.
This is not the first time that the West has been threatened with a cyber-jihad.
In December 2006, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security's Computer Emergency Readiness Team warned U.S. banks and financial institutions of a possible al-Qaeda cyberattack.
That operation, nicknamed "the Electronic Battle of Guantanamo," turned out to be a dud.



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