Wall Street Journal was hacked, apologized and asked people to subscribe to PewDiePie
Last night, a Wall Street Journal website was hacked by PewDiePie fans. Specifically, they edited a post on the site so that it looked like the publisher's apology to PewDiePie about their reporters 'misinformation' about him and promised to sponsor him to win. Winning the race on the number of people subcriber.
Immediately after discovering the incident, Wall Street magazine quickly removed the web that was defaced (edit the display content) and conducted a thorough investigation.
In February 2017, Wall Street magazine conducted an investigation of this YouTube channel founder Felix Kjellberg, which lost his chance to partner with YouTube Red and Maker Studios, Disney's film producer. Therefore, for PewDiePie fans, Wall Street magazine is a rival.
The claimant responsible for the attack also revealed how to obtain login information into the WSJ's content management system. The hacker said the password is the username.
This is not the first time, PewDiePie fans are fans of their idols. Last month, a hacker exploited a vulnerability in tens of thousands of printers to automatically print out a subscribe call to the PewDiePie channel.
See more:
- PlayStation Classic was hacked by hackers to play comfortable games from USB after only 1 week of launch
- Just released iOS 12 has been successfully hacked by Chinese hackers on the iPhone Xs
- Good hackers find and patch the vulnerability for more than 100,000 other routers
You should read it
- Hacker attacks 50,000 printers, sends a message asking people to subscribe to PewDiePie
- The top 35 most popular 'Famous Family Friends'
- Investing in virtual money: The ambiguity between 'currency' and 'stocks' confuses Wall Street
- Bright future for Smartbook series?
- Huawei's HiSilicon semiconductor unit is also 'breathless'
- Wall Street's Secret Weapon: The Advanced Trading Tools Fueling Big Wins
- World hackers in China
- What is Bullet Journal?
- Amazon will launch glasses without glasses in June
- Amazon bought Twitch
- Even Facebook employees can look at personal information whether you want it or not
- Apple considers removing Qualcomm chips on iPhones and iPads next year