updated Wed. September 25, 2024
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Haaretz
April 26, 2018
The so-called RedHack leak – published by WikiLeaks at the height of Erdogan's post-coup purges in December 2016 – contained over 57,000 emails belonging to Albayrak. They detailed what Foreign Policy described as everything “from indirect involvement with ISIS' oil trade to free press crackdowns.”.
SPIEGEL ONLINE
February 23, 2018
The hackers belonging to the radical left-wing group RedHack have repeatedly attracted attention with their spectacular operations. They have forced their way into the computer systems of the Turkish police force, the secret service and the country's Council of Higher Education. But in September 2016,Ãâà...
Al-Monitor
February 22, 2018
For example, in February 2017, Yucel was "invited" to police headquarters to be questioned about his interactions with the Redhack organization and about Erdogan's son-in-law Berat Albayrak's emails. He reported to the police on his own. The allegations were “provoking public hatred and enmity” andÃâà...
Foreign Policy (blog)
December 8, 2016
The leak, sourced to a communist hacktivist group known as Redhack that has targeted the Turkish government in the past, span 16 years worth of what appears to be Albayrak's personal emails from 2000 to 2016. Neither Albayrak nor the Turkish government has yet confirmed the authenticity of the leaks.
The Daily Dot
October 13, 2016
In their 20 years of operation, the hacktivist group RedHack has pulled off many high-profile breaches, such as leaking documents from Turkish National Police, penetrating the Turkish army's Commando Brigade, wiping out electricity bills in protest of a power plant, and defacing milk companies thatÃâà...
The Register
October 9, 2016
Turkey has blocked access to major technology sites and services including GitHub, Microsoft OneDrive and Dropbox, seemingly to suppress circulation of some 57,623 stolen emails allegedly felt to reveal a widespread campaign of propaganda and deception. The Government under president RecepÃâà...
The Daily Dot
September 30, 2016
Leaked emails from the Turkish government provide new details of how Turkey's pro-government Twitter troll army targets the opposition and silences media criticism in the media. Last Friday, RedHack, a Marxist hacker group, claimed to have hacked personal email accounts of Turkey's Energy MinisterÃâà...
Daily Sabah
April 14, 2016
The American hacker who is believed to have led attacks on government websites in more than 30 countries in 2011 and 2012 claimed that the U.S. government disregarded his interactions with the Turkish hacker group RedHack, with which he brokered an alliance with his own group, AntiSec. EvidenceÃâà...
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