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A hacker remotely wiped three white supremacist websites while he was speaking at a hacker conference last week, with the sites now back online.
An unknown intruder, who passes by Martha Root – dressed as the Pink Ranger from Power Rangers – took down the WhiteDate, WhiteChild, and WhiteDeal servers in real time at the end of the story at the annual Chaos Communication Congress in Hamburg, Germany.
Root spoke with the media Eva Hoffmann and Christian FuchsWHO wrote a story about pages stolen from the German weekly Die Zeit in October.
In writing this WhiteDate, which Hoffmann described as “Tinder for Nazis”; WhiteChild, a site that claims to match egg donors for white supremacists; and WhiteDeal, a Taskrabbit-esque marketplace for racists, both offline.
The administrator of the three websites confirmed the hacking of their social media accounts.
“They take down all my websites publicly while the audience is enjoying themselves. This is cyberterrorism,” the administrator wrote on X Sunday, promising results.
The administrator reported that Root had deleted their X account before it could be restored.
Root also published what it says was removed from WhiteDate online.
The hacker said they deleted the WhiteDate community’s posts and discovered “a clean, unsecured network that would put even your grandmother’s AOL account to shame.” Root said that users’ photos also include accurate geolocation metadata that “provides home addresses with sensitive selfies.”
“Imagine calling yourself a ‘competitor’ but forgetting to secure your site – maybe try better WordPress hosting before global dominance,” Root wrote.
Downloaded information includes user profiles that include name, photos, descriptions, age, location (both with correct directions and country and country), gender, language, race, and other information that users have downloaded. Root wrote on the site that “currently” there are no emails, passwords, or private conversations.
According to the release, WhiteData had more than 6,500 users, of which 86% were men and 14% were women. “It’s the gender balance that makes Smurf Village seem like a feminist utopia,” Root wrote.
Root accessed websites using AI chatbots that bypassed authentication processes and were verified as “clean,” according to the interview. in detail.
DDoSecrets, a non-profit organization which keeps the information downloaded in the public interest, he announced that he had received it “files and user information” from three white supremacist sites. The group, which calls this release “WhiteLeaks“They have not released the data publicly but instead are asking certified journalists and investigators to request access to the entire 100 gigabytes of data.
The three webmasters did not immediately respond to TechCrunch’s request for comment sent to an email that was shown at the conference. TechCrunch also sent an email to the address found on the contact details of two of the three websites. The person behind the address did not respond to our email.
Root, Hoffmann, and Fuchs claim to have identified the site administrator as a German woman. TechCrunch has not been able to independently verify the identity of the administrator.