TheAlameda.org Hacked
Posted by ben on 09 Jun 2009 at 09:33 am | Tagged as: arts organizations
Uh oh. San Antonio’s newest museum’s website has been hacked, , and with only days to go before the acclaimed Phantom Sightings show closes:
Of the 7 pages we tested on the site over the past 90 days, 7 page(s) resulted in malicious software being downloaded and installed without user consent. The last time Google visited this site was on 2009-06-09, and the last time suspicious content was found on this site was on 2009-06-09.
We see website security breaches all the time, so this doesn’t necessarily reflect poorly on the Alameda’s web team, but I hope they’re working overtime to get it fixed.
UPDATE: As long as we’re on the topic of museum websites, I just went to the McNay’s site and found:
UPDATE II: It’s June 11th, and it looks like our museum websites are safe & accessible. Alameda purged their malware and McNay fixed their scripting bugs. Whew.
have no idea what to sing at graduation. D: Help please? It’s Thursday. xD
Luckily, Emvergeoning took the smarter route and allowed its moonies the opportunity to post their hi-fallootin’/shoe-gazing comments here daily, lest they feel rebuffed and pursue hacking the vaulted “Star Wars”-esque defense shields of Emvergeoning.
Or, perhaps it was an inside job over at the Smithsonian. In ‘Nam we called it fragging when you take out an officer who’s acting like a real son of a biscuit eater. The Emperor at the Alameda may not wear any clothing, but people have their limits.
Alright now young people, if any of you vandalizing-loving punks are caught on the Riverwalk Extension late at night,and you see an old man burning rubber on his wheelchair coming towards you, I hope you know how to swim.
Dismissed,
The Colonel
can I hate John Wayne upholding [Barry] Goldwater and yet love him tenderly when abruptly he takes Natalie Wood into his arms in the last reel of The Searchers?
Whoa. Sleep with one eye open, SAMA!
thanks for the reminder to go see Phantom Sightings..
Occasionally a service runs a double agent whom it knows to be under the control of the other service and therefore has little ability to manipulate or even one who it knows has been successfully redoubled. The question why a service sometimes does this is a valid one. One reason for us is humanitarian: when the other service has gained physical control of the agent by apprehending him in a denied area, we often continue the operation even though we know that he has been doubled back because we want to keep him alive if we can
…something about a rock or a hard place
Cute fact =) The Koala bear is not really a bear, but is really related to the kangaroo and the wombat.