Feds and cops busted as hacker dump exposes ties to adult-dating site

Reuters/Paul Hackett

Reuters/Paul Hackett

The men behind the screen names “Eaglesfan_6969” and “Verywilling2011” are looking for sex, and they’re doing it from government-provided email accounts, according to data pilfered from a hacked dating website.

A trove of personal information pertaining to paid account
holders of AdultFriendFinder, a website that touts itself as
letting users “Find a fuck buddy for online sex,” has
surfaced, and its contents suggest employees of local and federal
agencies, including law enforcement, the Navy and the Federal
Aviation Administration have used their government-provided email
addresses to search for partners.

UK’s Channel 4 News confirmed first this week that the website
had been hacked and that the information of approximately 3.9
million users had been leaked, including online handles, email
addresses and sexual preferences of account holders. Now as that
data is perused, new details are emerging that raise questions
about what government workers are doing with their official
accounts.

READ MORE: Love virus alert: Sexual data of 4mn
adult website users reportedly exposed by hackers

Among account holders identified through the leaked details
include individuals with emails linked to the United States
Department of Homeland Security, the FAA, the government of
Augusta, Georgia; the state of Virginia and the Metropolitan
Police Department of Washington, DC.

DHS guidelines prohibit employees from using their government
email for “Engaging in any activity that would discredit DHS,
including seeking, transmitting, collecting or storing
defamatory, discriminatory, obscene, harassing or intimidating
messages or material
.” The Pentagon says in a 2013 report
that “Federal Government communication systems and equipment
(including Government-owned telephones, facsimile machines,
electronic mail, Internet systems and commercial systems when the
federal Government pays for use) shall be for official use and
authorized purposes only.”
There is an exemption in place
for “morale and welfare” communications by employees on extended
deployments.


One of the account holders is registered with a Navy.mil email
address, and the hacked account records reveal that the person
logged-on to the dating site from an IP address connected to the
Navy Network Information Center in Virginia Beach, VA. A cursory
Google search of that person’s name suggests they were a civilian
employee of the US Navy who was married as of 2002.

Another member, who was interested in BDSM according to the data,
used their official Plano, Texas city email address to open an
AdultFriendFinder membership, but connected to the site while
browsing from a Starbucks.

On the AdultFriendFinder homepage, the website says it connects
users who are “Hoping to meet someone special for a hot,
sexual relationship or even just a quick fling
” and claims
the site “has helped millions of people find traditional
partners, swinger groups, threesomes, and a variety of other
alternative partners
.”


In a statement, the company behind the dating website confirmed
they had “been made aware of a potential data security issue
and understands and fully appreciates the seriousness of the
issue
.” Mandiant, a Virginia-based security contractor, is
helping them investigate.

Andrew “weev” Auernheimer, a security researcher who was
analyzing the data on Friday morning, told RT’s Andrew Blake that
revelations concerning the use of government accounts to search
for sex shouldn’t be surprising.


“Military facilities should not be so incompetent as to allow
their employees to freely browse trash like this on the Internet,
it’s a major national security risk,”
said Auernheimer.
“This just goes to show the decadence and obsoletion of the
United States government, a place where even our military bases
are filled with men actively searching for whores.”



Earlier this month, a Deptartment of Defense audit revealed that
Pentagon employees have been using government credit cards on
gambling and escort service. In January, the Washington Times
uncovered evidence that an employee with the DoD’s Defense
Finance Accounting Service tried to access pornographic websites
from his work computers more than 12,000 times during 2014.

RT reached out to several individuals identified in the leaked
data and their appropriate press representative, including the
public information unit of DC’s Metropolitan Police Department,
but has not immediately received comment from the affected
parties contacted.

Source Article from http://rt.com/usa/261281-friend-finder-hack-cops/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=RSS

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