A U.S. firm that helps connect more than 700 companies
with customers through social media says a Syrian group hacked the
company's web address to upload a message to other websites.
Gigya CEO Patrick Salyer outlined what happened in a blog published Thursday.
At around 6:45 a.m. Eastern Time, the company discovered "sporadic failures with access to our service," Salyer wrote.
The
executive said hackers had rerouted Internet traffic from Gigya's
website to an outside computer server. That server generated a message
to visitors that their site had been hacked by the Syrian Electronic
Army.
Published reports noted the message appeared on websites for several UK newspapers, CNBC and the National Hockey League.
The
message also showed up briefly on some retail sites just as they
prepared for the biggest shopping day of the year on Friday. The
National Retail Federation did not immediately comment Thursday.
Still, the issue appeared to be resolved quickly.
The
hackers rerouted Gigya's web traffic by tweaking the company's web
address on Internet registry Whois.com so that it would point visitors
to the outside server. The registry entry on Whois.com was fixed about
an hour after the company detected the breach, Salyer said.
Even so, the executive sought to reassure the company's clients.
"To
be absolutely clear: Neither Gigya's platform itself nor any user,
administrator or operational data has been compromised and was never at
risk of being compromised," he wrote.
The Syrian Electronic Army
aligns itself with Syrian President Bashar Assad. It has previously
taken credit for hacking media sites like E! Online and the BBC.
Source : Yahoo
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