Âé¶¹ÒùÔº


Swedish Internet sites unreachable after warning from Anonymous

Indian supporters of the Anonymous collective
Activists supporting the group Anonymous protest in New Delhi in June 2012. Several Swedish government websites could not be accessed Friday after they had received a warning the evening before from a group claiming to be the Anonymous collective, which supports fugitive WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

Several Swedish government websites could not be accessed Friday after they had received a warning the evening before from a group claiming to be the Anonymous collective, which supports fugitive WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

The Swedish branch of Anonymous denied it was behind the attacks.

Assange is wanted by the Swedish authorities for questioning over allegations of sexual assault but has been under diplomatic protection inside the Ecuadoran embassy in London since mid-August.

At midday the web sites of the Swedish Central Bank, the , the Parliament and the courts could not be reached, AFP determined.

They may have been the victims of a distributed (DDoS) attack in which sites are saturated by requests.

The Swedish branch of Anonymous, which communicates on the micro-blogging Twitter site under the name of @AnonOpsSweden, denied it was involved.

"We call b(expletive) on the op... #nothingNew," the message said in English.

"Our theory on #opsweden its European Cyber Security Month/EU testdriving cyberattacks blaming it on #Anonymous," it added in a later message.

In a film posted on the online version of the tabloid newspaper Aftonbladet Friday a young man aged 18 said it was he who had published a video Thursday evening on the Internet site .

In it a masked individual read in English in a female voice a message indicating that the sites of several Swedish public bodies would be attacked Friday.

"It was I who made the film," the young man said in the Aftonbladet contribution. "But I had help with the wording. I'm not so good in English," he added.

"We are going to attack the Central Bank and the police...and several other government sites," the young man said. "It'll be the worst thing ever done by Anonymous. It'll mark world history."

All week Swedish public authorities and companies have experienced similar attacks. Police have linked them to the Assange affair.

blocked access to several popular Swedish websites for part of Monday.

(c) 2012 AFP

Citation: Swedish Internet sites unreachable after warning from Anonymous (2012, October 6) retrieved 15 July 2025 from /news/2012-10-swedish-internet-sites-unreachable-anonymous.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Swedish police link Internet attacks to WikiLeaks founder Assange's case

0 shares

Feedback to editors