CNN, Washington Post sites hacked by Syrian group

The Washington Post Building in Washington, DC. AFP PHOTO / Saul LOEB / FILE

What you need to know:

  • Syrian Electronic Army is linked to attacks on the websites including Agence France-Presse, The Financial Times, the Associated Press.
  • The group has claimed the news media has been biased in its coverage of the deadly conflict in Syria.

WASHINGTON

A Syrian group is alleged to be behind a cyber attack that affected some services of Washington Post, CNN, Time magazine and The Post.

According to E Hacking News, the cyber attack stemmed from a news recommendation widget, or software add-on, called Outbrain.

Washington Post becomes the latest media organisation victimised by the group that backs strongman Bashar al-Assad.

A note to readers said the Post website "was hacked today (Thursday), with readers on certain stories being redirected to the site of the Syrian Electronic Army."

HIT FACEBOOK

The Post said it was "working to resolve the issue."

The hacker group has been linked to attacks on the websites or Twitter feeds of numerous media organisations including Agence France-Presse, The Financial Times, the Associated Press and the satirical news site The Onion.

Earlier this week, the hackers hit the Facebook and Twitter accounts of the New York Post.

The group has claimed the news media has been biased in its coverage of the deadly conflict in Syria.

E Hacking News said it spoke to one of the hackers and displayed screen shots illustrating the takeover.

NYT AFFECTED

The Syrian hacker group also tweeted screenshots showing it had control of the widgets of those news organisations as well as that of The New York Times.

Outbrain said in a tweet that its recommendations were down "due to an attack," without elaborating.

A CNN spokesman said only a "plug-in" on its international website was affected.

"The security of a vendor plug-in that appeared on CNNi.com was briefly compromised today," CNN said in a statement.

"The issue was quickly identified and plug-in disabled. Neither CNN.com nor CNNi.com were penetrated directly."

The New York Times site was down during a busy period Wednesday, which the newspaper attributed to an internal server problem.