Facebook IPO

  • Most Popular
  • Most Shared

REUTERS SHOWCASE

Patent War

Patent War

Oracle patent claims vs. Google sent to jury.  Full Article 

Spectrum Sale

Spectrum Sale

FCC seeks details on Verizon spectrum sale offer.  Full Article 

Smart Smartphones

Smart Smartphones

Canada smartphones soon to double as credit cards.  Full Article 

New Models

New Models

Nokia's new cheap models bet on games, web access.  Full Article 

New Markets

New Markets

Baidu eyes mass market with low-cost smartphone.  Full Article 

Shaking it Up

Shaking it Up

Yahoo investors applaud change, fear limbo.  Full Article | Video 

Consumers' Wrath

Consumers' Wrath

Apple, publishers must face consumers' e-book suit.  Full Article 

Hackers post Kosovo flag on Serb official site

Related Topics

A Kosovo Albanian takes a picture of a giant Kosovo flag draped over one side of the parliament building in the capital Pristina April 9, 2008. Hackers posted the Kosovo flag on the Serbian parliament website in an action to block Serbian government sites, a Belgrade radio station reported on Thursday. REUTERS/Hazir Reka/Files

A Kosovo Albanian takes a picture of a giant Kosovo flag draped over one side of the parliament building in the capital Pristina April 9, 2008. Hackers posted the Kosovo flag on the Serbian parliament website in an action to block Serbian government sites, a Belgrade radio station reported on Thursday.

Credit: Reuters/Hazir Reka/Files

BELGRADE | Thu Sep 11, 2008 5:24pm IST

BELGRADE (Reuters) - Hackers posted the Kosovo flag on the Serbian parliament website in an action to block Serbian government sites, a Belgrade radio station reported on Thursday.

The "Kosova Hackers Group" told visitors to the parliament website that it had also attacked other official sites on Wednesday, including the Serbian army's.

The site looked normal on Thursday and parliament had no comment on the incident.

Serbia does not recognise the independence of its former province of Kosovo and objects to the use of its symbols at international gatherings.

"Those hackers are using programmes that are freely accessible on the Internet and can be downloaded free of charge," Slobodan Markovic, an advisor in the Serbian telecommunications ministry, told Radio B92.

Markovic said Serbian government sites do not have a unique security system but that each ministry decides how to protect the data.

The Daily Press said several other official Internet sites were also under "Kosovo Hackers" attack on the same day, including the Defence Ministry, Commercial Court and Serbian Business Registers Agency.

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.