Dutch teen turns out to be possible to LulzSec affiliated – update

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There seems to be more clear about the composition of LulzSec. One of the participants is possible, a Dutchman who operates under the alias Joepie91, but he denies this. LulzSec, meanwhile, has a statement to be made public.

On the weblog LulzSec Exposed are irc logs posted that is sourced from the hackersgroepering that the past few weeks several websites have cracked or via ddos attacks on the knees. The anonymous author of the blog states that he had access to the chatkanalen of the hard core of LulzSec.

On LulzSec Exposed is also claimed that a person who operates under the pseudonym Joepie91 would come from the Netherlands and is part of the Lulzsec crew. He would play a pivotal role within the communication lines of the group, as would appear from an analysis of the irc logs. Joepie91 was Sunday not be reached for comment.

From an analysis of the irc logs that LulzSec Exposed, it appears that Joepie91 the most active visitor of the channel. He has almost two times more activity displayed in the chat than the number two on the list, someone who is known by the nickname ‘storm’. Statistics from the website also shows that the most visitors from the USA, Belgium and the Netherlands in the top 10 are in that list.

Would continue to LulzSec a splintergroepering of former Anonymous members, while Joepie91 also owner of the domain name Anonnews.org. Also, personal information of other alleged LulzSec members published.

LulzSec claims, however, that previously published information on LulzSec Exposed only could come from a irc-channel where new members are recruited. Meanwhile, LulzSec a statement issued in which the hackers set up to continue attack, and the publishing of credentials in spite of the threat that members be arrested.

The website Writerspace.com , meanwhile, has admitted that almost a quarter of the 62,000 in by LulzSec published inloggevens of his website are coming from. The company states that its users ‘ e-mail informed. Lulzsec published the list with the tens of thousands of inloggevens last week.

Earlier this week claimed LulzSec all the user data from 200,000 accounts of the first person shooter Brink in the hands, but these are deliberately not to have published. The group recommends that players of the game to change their password.

Update 18:45: The person who the nickname Joepie91 uses, Tweakers.net by mail to know that he is not part of LulzSec, and never has been involved in the activities of the hackersgroepering. He argues that the writer on the LulzSec Exposed blog, which is Nonynews should have been called deliberate misinformation will spread. The published irc-logs would, moreover, not of a specific LulzSec channel are derived. However, claims to be the teenager that he people know that are active within LulzSec and that he by them is invited in the relevant chat channel on irc: “There is an overlap between Anonymous and LulzSec, and because I was closely involved with Anonymous, it is thus not very surprising that I of the people involved in LulzSec, also know”. Also confirms Joepie91 that he is the owner of the website Anonnews.org.