Yemen Cyber Army
The Yemen Cyber Army (YCA) is a pro-Yemeni hacker group that has claimed responsibility for the defacement of the London-based pro-Saudi Al-Hayat website in April 2015, as well as the exfiltration of data from the Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs in May subsequently listed on WikiLeaks.
Associated with the 2015 Yemeni Civil War, the group claims to be based in Yemen itself, but there is speculation from security experts they are Iranian-backed based on IP address information and use of the Persian language.[1][2][3] Experts suggest the organization is a manifestation of the ongoing proxy war between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Saudi-based Anonymous-affiliated hackers contributed to the ongoing #protest against the Saudi regime.[4]
References
- ^ Frenkel, Sheera (24 June 2014). "Meet The Mysterious New Hacker Army Freaking Out The Middle East". Buzzfeed. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
- ^ Franceschi-Bicchierai, Lorenzo (26 June 2015). "There's Evidence the 'Yemen Cyber Army' Is Actually Iranian". Vice. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
- ^ SC Staff (22 July 2015). "Yemen Cyber Army promises more attacks, but are they a front for Iran?". Retrieved 20 August 2015.
- ^ Gili (26 June 2015). "The Iranian-Saudi Conflict and Its Cyber Outlet". Archived from the original on 17 June 2018. Retrieved 20 August 2015.
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persistent threats
- Bangladesh Black Hat Hackers
- Bureau 121
- Charming Kitten
- Cozy Bear
- Dark Basin
- DarkMatter
- Elfin Team
- Equation Group
- Fancy Bear
- GOSSIPGIRL (confederation)
- Guccifer 2.0
- Hacking Team
- Helix Kitten
- Iranian Cyber Army
- Lazarus Group (BlueNorOff) (AndAriel)
- NSO Group
- Numbered Panda
- PLA Unit 61398
- PLA Unit 61486
- PLATINUM
- Pranknet
- Red Apollo
- Rocket Kitten
- Stealth Falcon
- Syrian Electronic Army
- Tailored Access Operations
- The Shadow Brokers
- xDedic
- Yemen Cyber Army
- Cyber Anakin
- George Hotz
- Guccifer
- Jeremy Hammond
- Junaid Hussain
- Kristoffer von Hassel
- Mustafa Al-Bassam
- MLT
- Ryan Ackroyd
- Sabu
- Topiary
- Track2
- The Jester
publicly disclosed
- Evercookie (2010)
- iSeeYou (2013)
- Heartbleed (2014)
- Shellshock (2014)
- POODLE (2014)
- Rootpipe (2014)
- Row hammer (2014)
- SS7 vulnerabilities (2014)
- WinShock (2014)
- JASBUG (2015)
- Stagefright (2015)
- DROWN (2016)
- Badlock (2016)
- Dirty COW (2016)
- Cloudbleed (2017)
- Broadcom Wi-Fi (2017)
- EternalBlue (2017)
- DoublePulsar (2017)
- Silent Bob is Silent (2017)
- KRACK (2017)
- ROCA vulnerability (2017)
- BlueBorne (2017)
- Meltdown (2018)
- Spectre (2018)
- EFAIL (2018)
- Exactis (2018)
- Speculative Store Bypass (2018)
- Lazy FP state restore (2018)
- TLBleed (2018)
- SigSpoof (2018)
- Foreshadow (2018)
- Dragonblood (2019)
- Microarchitectural Data Sampling (2019)
- BlueKeep (2019)
- Kr00k (2019)
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