Train station Wi-Fi cyber attack: London’s biggest hubs including King’s Cross and Waterloo hit by ‘Islamophobic cyber attack’

Manchester Piccadilly station Wi-Fi firm issues statement after users targeted with terrorism message

From the London Evening Standard and the Manchester Evening News

Hacking somebody else’s wifi is obviously wrong. An offence under all sorts of electronic and communication legislation. Probably old school criminal or malicious damage as well. But presenting factual, historical  MSM news reports is NOT Islamophobia. And the police and establishment do themselves no favours screaming that.

A man has been arrested after London’s biggest train stations had their Wi-Fi networks hacked by a cyber-attack displaying Islamophobic messages, police said.

Officers are investigating after the attack on internet services at 19 stations across the UK managed by the Network Rail.

On Thursday evening, the British Transport Police said a male employee of Global Reach, the company that provides wifi services to Network Rail, had been arrested on suspicion of offences under the Computer Misuse Act 1990 and the Malicious Communications Act 1988. I said there would be something involving communications and malice. 

A spokesperson (of BTP) said: “Officers received reports just after 5pm yesterday of a breach of some Network Rail wifi services at railway stations which were displaying Islamophobic messaging. The abuse of access was restricted to the defacement of the splash pages, and no personal data is known to have been affected.”

People logging onto the Wi-Fi saw a webpage containing details of terrorist incidents in the UK and abroad.

Piccadilly was one of 20 stations where the internet service was targeted in the “‘cyber security incident” last night (Wednesday). Other stations targeted by the hack include Birmingham New Street, Glasgow Central, Leeds City, Liverpool Lime Street, Bristol Temple Meads, Edinburgh Waverley, Reading, and Guildford.

In a statement issued to the Manchester Evening News, Telent said: “We are aware of the cyber security incident affecting the public Wi-Fi at Network Rail’s managed stations and are investigating with Network Rail and other stakeholders. “We have been informed there is an ongoing investigation by the British Transport Police into this incident, so it would not be appropriate to comment further at this stage.”

The MEN have published a censored copy of the offending message.

This is what it actually looked like.

The BBC news report on the Manchester Arena jihad murders of 2015 followed by a report of the 2005 London transport jihad murders.

Repeating MSM factual news is NOT Islamophobia.

If the truth hurts, wailing about hurt feelings won’t change a thing.

 

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2 Responses

  1. There is no such thing as islamophobia. Criticising islam is not only OK, but should be the default position of anyone who rejects extremist ideologies.

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