0 évaluation0% ont trouvé ce document utile (0 vote)
53 vues1 page
A Saudi hacker took down the website of the Beirut-based SKeyes center for Media and Cultural Freedom, which monitors press freedom in Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan. The hacker left a message dedicating the act to the King of Saudi Arabia and Syrian President, while the site remained offline into the evening. SKeyes is dedicated to slain journalist Samir Kassir, who was critical of Syrian presence in Lebanon and a leader in protests that removed Syrian troops.
A Saudi hacker took down the website of the Beirut-based SKeyes center for Media and Cultural Freedom, which monitors press freedom in Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan. The hacker left a message dedicating the act to the King of Saudi Arabia and Syrian President, while the site remained offline into the evening. SKeyes is dedicated to slain journalist Samir Kassir, who was critical of Syrian presence in Lebanon and a leader in protests that removed Syrian troops.
Droits d'auteur :
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Formats disponibles
Téléchargez comme PDF, TXT ou lisez en ligne sur Scribd
A Saudi hacker took down the website of the Beirut-based SKeyes center for Media and Cultural Freedom, which monitors press freedom in Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan. The hacker left a message dedicating the act to the King of Saudi Arabia and Syrian President, while the site remained offline into the evening. SKeyes is dedicated to slain journalist Samir Kassir, who was critical of Syrian presence in Lebanon and a leader in protests that removed Syrian troops.
Droits d'auteur :
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
Formats disponibles
Téléchargez comme PDF, TXT ou lisez en ligne sur Scribd
Beirut media freedom site BEIRUT: A Saudi hacker hit the Beirut-based SKeyes center for Media and Cultural Freedom Sun- day, bringing down their internet site, which continued to be off-line well into Sunday evening. Skeyes (Samir Kassir eyes) is the official web page of the Samir Kassir Foun- dation, which is dedicated to the memory of the slain journalist, killed in 2005. The hacker, calling himself Khaled al-Anzi, posted a message on the site, dedicating the act of piracy to the King of Saudi Arabia Abdul- lah Bin Abdel-Aziz and to the Syrian President Bashar Assad. Skeyes media watchdog was set up in 2008 to monitoring and report on press freedom in Lebanon, Syria and Jor- dan. A prominent left-wing activist and An-Nahar columnist, Kassir was a major critic of the Syrian presence in Lebanon. He was also a leading figure in the Cedar Revolution, a series of protests in 2005 which led to the withdrawal of Syrian troops from Lebanon. – The Daily Star